Philip D. Hearn (1943-2024) was a longtime Mississippi news reporter and editor as well as a research writer for the University Relations Office of Mississippi State University. His work was published in Army Reserve magazine, Vietnam Magazine, and many newspapers.
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"Hurricane Camille . . . reads like fine adventure fiction. That it is definitely nonfiction makes it all the more troubling and just downright good." -Danny McKenzie, The Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal, December 19, 2004) "Hearn's account packs a great deal of punch and features a narrative style that makes it difficult to put the book down." -Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society, May 2006 "In the last chapter-'The Next Camille'-Hearn points out that it is not a matter of if, but when the next killer hurricane will hit the Coast." -Mississippi Business Journal, August 2, 2004 "Hearn brings readers a cinematic reconstruction of the devastating storm. . . . He still has a reporter's eye for precise detail." - Edward Morris, Bookpage.com, August 2004 "What grips the reader by the throat are the oral histories taken from survivors." - Jim Fraiser, The Biloxi Sun-Herald, July 25, 2004 "Hearn builds an intriguing narrative out of the voices of Camille survivors." -Bill Minor, The Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal, August 5, 2004 "While acknowledging broader policy concerns . . . Hearn focuses on the variety of human experiences during Camille and does that quite well." -The Journal of Southern History, Vol. 71, No. 3, Aug. 2005 "With a little imagination, you'll feel as if you were actually present during that terrible night of death and destruction." - Charley Reese, nationally syndicated, King Features columnist, July 14, 2005

