THE COST OR DAMAGE ESTIMATES FOR THE HURRICANES listed in the text are the costs as they were tallied in the year the hurricane occurred. Many people are also interested in how much the damage from past hurricanes would amount to in current dollars. Rather than clutter up the text with those amounts, I’ve added two tables at the end of the book that cover the most expensive hurricanes in modern history. One table lists the hurricanes that caused at least $1 billion of damage in the year they occurred. The other table ranks the most expensive hurricanes according to the 2019 Consumer Price Index adjusted cost. Note that not all hurricanes mentioned in the text are in those tables. By the same token, many hurricanes in those tables are not discussed in the text.
FOR THE HURRICANES DISCUSSED in this book, death tolls are given. Before the 1980s, virtually all of the hurricane-related deaths tallied by officials were direct deaths. A direct death is more immediate and occurs during the storm. Examples include drowning, being hit by a flying object, or being crushed by a collapsing building. Since the 1980s, better records and methodologies have enabled people to track indirect deaths as well. Indirect deaths occur after the storm has passed. Examples might include being killed in a car accident because the electricity is out and there are no traffic lights; dying as a result of a preexisting health condition that is exacerbated by the stress or strain of the storm, or because your medicine runs out; being electrocuted days after the storm by a downed wire; or dropping dead of a heart attack while cleaning up debris.
The distinction between direct and indirect deaths is not always clear, and the time frame for counting deaths indirectly related to a given storm varies depending on who is doing the counting. For example, some might count only deaths that occur in the days and weeks after the storm, while others would include deaths taking place many months or even years later. Still, delineating between direct and indirect deaths is useful. Therefore, the death tolls reported in the text for hurricanes before the 1980s include direct fatalities only. For later hurricanes, numbers are presented for both direct and indirect deaths when available. Bear in mind, then, that the death tolls for hurricanes before the 1980s would be considerably higher if indirect deaths were also accounted for.
THE HISTORY OF EVERY hurricane has four basic components: the time leading up to landfall, the impact of the storm, the immediate response, and the long-term recovery. This book will focus on the first three, since the fourth component, or the long tail of every hurricane, may span decades and is a complex political and bureaucratic story that can’t be adequately told or even summarized within the confines of a single book that covers so many hurricanes.