© 2025 KWBU
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Likely Stories - The Displacements

Of all the books I have read recently, the one I have recommended to the most people is “The Displacements” by Bruce Holsinger.

Holsinger is an award-winning author of both fiction and non-fiction books, and he is also a professor of medieval literature at the University of Virginia. The Displacements is Holsinger’s fourth novel and is set in contemporary United States in the aftermath of a record-making Category Six hurricane.

The “Displacements” refers to millions of internally displaced persons forced to flee the path of destruction left in the wake of the storm, called Hurricane Luna. The novel opens with Luna’s first landfall, which batters the southern coast of Florida, destroying Miami and surrounding cities. This results in the first wave of migration, which sends the Displacements to multiple FEMA-run megashelters spread throughout the United States. While waves of Floridians flee the path of destruction, Luna gains strength as it barrels across the Gulf of Mexico. Luna makes a second devastating landfall with a storm surge that levels much of the Texas coast, including Houston and Galveston. This results in a second wave of refugees pouring into already overfull shelters, including Tooley Farm in Oklahoma, which is the novel’s primary setting.

Holsinger’s novel focuses on the experiences of three protagonists: Daphne, an evacuee from Miami forced to relocate to the camp with her children; Rainn, a FEMA relief worker in charge of coordinating the megashelters’ logistics along with the federal and state aid to the camp; and Tate, an opportunistic con-man who preys on vulnerable camp residents. Tooley Farm is populated with characters from diverse backgrounds, including both the very affluent and those of lesser means. But in the camp everyone is equally destitute.

In the days following the storm, the Displacements learn they have no homes to which they can return, making their stay at Tooley Farm indefinite. Amidst this uncertainty and shifting camp dynamics as new refugees arrive, tension among the Displacements soon erupts into open conflict, fueled in part by prejudice as well as political cleavages that are exacerbated rather than mitigated by shared suffering.

Without giving away details about how the story plays out, I will say this book was gripping from the first page. I was invested in all of the characters, even the ones that were not particularly likeable, and I stayed up late into the night, finishing the four hundred plus page book in a single day.

One of the most interesting features of the book is that Holsinger weaves together the Tooley Farm characters’ story arcs with flash-forwards to a digital chronicle that recounts Luna’s destruction, the resulting mass migration, and efforts to rebuild the cities and individual lives affected by the storm. These digital records provide the reader not only with a retrospective on the successes and failures of the government’s response to this fictionalized disaster, but also they give the reader the occasion to reflect on the real-life implications of natural disasters that are intensified by climate change. For this reason, I think this is a perfect book-club selection.

Until the next episode of Likely Stories, I hope you find a good book that helps you to escape to places both real and imaginary,

RECENT EPISODES OF LIKELY STORIES
Likely Stories - Fingersmith
When I chose a book to review for Likely Stories, I think back to those that have stuck with me, books that I've recommended to people over and over again. Today I want to tell you about one of my favorite books. My name is Heather White. I teach art history at Baylor and today I’m reviewing the historical crime novel Fingersmith, by Sarah Waters, written in 2002.
Likely Stories - The Treasure Hunters Club by Tom Ryan
Welcome back to Likely Stories. I’m Paige Connell, and I teach English at Midway High School. Billed as “Everyone in My Family Has Killed Someone” meets “The Goonies”, I can confirm that this fun, winding story of buried treasure and buried secrets gives off strong vibes of that great book and the classic movie.
Likely Stories - Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt
Hello, I am Rebecca Flavin, Director of Engaged Learning Curriculum and Senior Lecturer in Political Science at Baylor University. One of the best books I have read so far this year is Shelby Van Pelt’s, “Remarkably Bright Creatures.”
Likely Stories - Mr. Texas by Lawrence Wright
“Mr. Texas,” by Pulitzer Prize winner Lawrence Wright, is a novel about the making of a Texas state legislator.
Likely Stories - The Unworthy by Augustina Bazterrica
Welcome to this weeks edition of Likely Stories, my name is Malcolm Foster, operations assistant at KWBU. The book I want to discuss today is a brutal, yet occasionally beautiful example of how some things, for better and worse, even in the most drastic of scenarios, never change.
Likely Stories - Witchcraft for Wayward Girls by Grady Hendrix
Hi. Welcome back to Likely Stories. I'm Paige Connell and I teach English at Midway High School. The late 1960s must have been quite a time to be alive. I missed it by just a decade or so. Groovy tunes, free love, mod fashion, patriarchal oppression. Wait, that last one doesn't sound so fun, but it is a topic that the author delves into in the social commentary masquerading as a story about unwed pregnant teenagers in Central Florida.
Likely Stories - Thirst by Mary Oliver
In Thirst, Mary Oliver invites us into a quiet conversation between sorrow and faith, where nature and grace meet in every line.
Likely Stories - The Exceptions by Kate Zernike
Hello, I'm Rebecca Flavin, a faculty member at Baylor University. My sister in law, who is a rocket scientist. Yes. I'm serious. Gave me Kate Zernike’s most recent book, ‘The Exceptions: Nancy Hopkins, MIT and the fight for Women in Science’. She knows I'm a fan of biographies and stories about brilliant, inspiring women, and this book checks both of those boxes.
Likely Stories - Death in Holy Orders by P.D. James
This is the Reverend Dr. Andrew Armond, associate rector of Saint Albans Episcopal Church here in Waco. Welcome to this week's edition of Likely Stories.
Likely Stories - Gandolfini: Jim, Tony and the Life of a Legend, by Jason Bailey
From Broadway to Bada Bing: a new biography unpacks the life, career, and lasting impact of James Gandolfini, star of The Sopranos.

Rebecca Flavin is a senior lecturer in Baylor University’s Political Science Department where she teaches classes on U.S. Constitutional law, politics and religion, and political philosophy and advises Baylor’s Model United Nations team. In 2021 Rebecca made the only New Year’s Resolution she has ever kept when she pledged to read a book each week for pleasure. She has kept up this practice the past two years because it turned out to be a lot more enjoyable than other resolutions she had made and broken.