© 2026 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 - The Madwomen of Paris by Jennifer Cody Epstein
Imagine being punched in the ovaries to bring on a fit.This is The Madwomen of Paris by Jennifer Cody Epstein, which was inspired by the dark history of the Salpêtrière asylum in the 1880s.
Likely Stories - Killers of a Certain Age
I am a huge James Bond fan, and never missed an episode of Charlie’s Angels as a pre-teen growing up. A story about women my age who could still fight, run, plan, take action, and do all the things they did in their early years really appealed to me.
Likely Stories - My Dark Vanessa by Kate Elizabeth Russell
The book that I'm reviewing today is challenging. It was an unsettling read, and I thought about it for weeks after I finished it. I hesitated to recommend it on Likely Stories. But these difficult books catch our attention for a reason, they are important to talk about and examine.
Likely Stories - American Road Trip by Patrick Flores-Scott
War is hell. And what comes after war, when soldiers return home, is often its own version of torment, one that takes exceptional patience and grace from everyone--those who love the soldiers as well as the soldiers themselves.
Likely Stories - Lorne: The Man Who Invented Saturday Night Live by Susan Morrison
I’ve been reading a lot about Saturday Night Live lately, for a couple of reasons. First, I talk about the show when I cover the history of television in my Introduction to Mass Communication class at Baylor, and I like to keep up with what’s going on with SNL. Second, Saturday Night Live just celebrated its 50th anniversary, so there’s been plenty written about it in the last year or so.
Likely Stories - The Celebrants by Steven Rowley
In nineteen-ninety-five, five college friends, distraught over the suspected suicide of their friend and haunted by the question “would Alec have died had he known how much he was loved?” enter into a lifelong pact to hold living funerals.
Likely Stories - Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir
Many times on public radio, you hear folks say, “Long-time listener, first-time caller.” Well, that’s me! I’m Maggie McCarthy—a long-time listener of KWBU—bringing you my, hopefully, first book review on Likely Stories.
Likely Stories - Spencer's Mountain by Earl Hamner Jr
A true story of a family’s deep love and incredibly difficult struggles in rural Virginia during the Great Depression becameone of the most beloved television shows of all time.Welcome to “Likely Stories.”I’m Diane Kemper.
Likely Stories - The Colonel and the King: Tom Parker, Elvis Presley and the Partnership that Rocked the World by Peter Guralnick
‘The Colonel and the King: Tom Parker, Elvis Presley and the Partnership that Rocked the World’, sheds new light on the infamous Colonel Tom Parker and his sometimes questionable choices in managing Elvis Presley's career. I'm Kevin Tankersley, and this is likely stories on KWBU.
Likely Stories - A Case of Mice and Murder by Sally Smith
Welcome to this week’s installment of Likely Stories on KWBU. My name is Gia Chevis, and I confess that I watch what is probably an unhealthy number of cozy murder mystery shows, mainly British and British-adjacent. I am absolutely the target audience for A Case of Mice and Murder, the first novel in Sally Smith’s newish detective series.

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.