Bruce S. Snow fills his spare time with writing and various musical endeavors. Snow earned a B.A. in History from the University of New Orleans. Over the years, he has served drinks, set up conferences, and driven an old-time streetcar. Currently, Snow is a precious metals broker in New Orleans, where he and his family returned to live in 2016.
"""[Bruce Snow's] chronicle of the week that follows [Katrina] moves at a gallop, at times both humorous and gutting, rendered through a gaze that is not unflinching, but captivating because of how precisely he renders the humanity of every flinch."" --Erica Berry for The Rumpus ""Legendary sociologist Kai T. Erickson predicted that Hurricane Katrina would be the most studied disaster in U.S. history. It may also be one of the most storied. Voluminous archives of Katrina survivor stories are now tucked away in university libraries, oral history projects, social media sites, and in films, books, newspapers, journals, and magazines worldwide for historians to peruse. Standing tall above these documented accounts is Bruce Snow's Can Everybody Swim? which could someday gain fame as the most richly detailed and complete account of the human misery at the Louisiana Superdome in late August and early September 2005."" --Stan Weeber, Arkansas Review ""In the sagas of Hurricane Katrina, the Superdome stands above a flooded New Orleans like a giant space saucer too packed with refugees, and refuse, to manage a launch. Bruce S. Snow has written the most thorough account I've seen of what it was like to be trapped in there, hour after hour for almost a week. With his mother, a dog and a shifting posse of allies, he watches New Orleans' ""shelter of last resort"" give way to thirst and hunger and then to the depravity that can come with terror and despair. He digs to the root of persistent rumors - of mass murder, rape, and wantonness - and comes up with credible explanations of what really went on. It's a dystopia right out of Dante, and yet Snow offsets misery with flashes of gallows humor and the glow of his gratitude for the men and women who bucked the herd and proved capable of tender mercies."" --Jed Horne, author of Breach of Faith, Hurricane Katrina and the Near Death of a Great American City ""Those of us who lived through Hurricane Katrina (inside or outside of New Orleans) remember well the horror stories (and rumors) that were reported out of the Louisiana Superdome, where some 20,000 evacuees survived in the days after the storm. Here is a genuine and authentic tale of the apocalyptic anarchy that reigned inside the 'feces-dome' -- the fear and panic, the hunger and thirst, the boredom and the racial tensions that people experienced inside this Hades, this netherworld of human existence. Bruce Snow marshals his considerable writing talent to tell the real story of those who survived this surreal nightmare, presided over by the U.S. Army. Snow's is a genuine new voice of non-fiction writing reminding us of Tom Wolfe's exhilarating ""new non-fiction"" of the 1960s - if the mere recording of the truth of slices of American life is stranger than fiction, you do not need to invent it."" --Günter Bischof, Marshall Plan Professor of History, University of New Orleans ""One of the best memoirs to come out of the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, Bruce S. Snow's real-life tale of survival after his world was blown away is a testament to how quickly our lives can change and to the kind of resiliency and strength ordinary people are capable of when the chips are down."" --David Koon, Arkansas Times ""A masterfully written account of the human misery and ultimate survival of those who lived through the worst natural and manmade disasters in U.S. history."" --Norman Robinson, retired veteran news anchor for WDSU New Orleans Channel 6 (NBC), Media Consultant, Motivational Speaker"