The exquisite, much-anticipated new novel by the author of Ship Fever, winner of the National Book Award.
Andrea Barrett has received a National Book Award and a MacArthur grant and has been a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. A fellow at the New York Public Library Center for Scholars and Writers, Barrett lives in North Adams, Massachusetts, and teaches at Williams College.
Andrea Barrett is in a class by herself. A near-perfect equipoise
between smooth storytelling and the suggestion of larger truths
*Newsday*
Few writers have mastered the historical novel as [Barrett] has...
Her re-creation of time and place remains glittering
*The Times*
This is a meticulously researched novel, and provides an edifying
glimpse into an odd, static world during a period when the world
outside was anything but static
*Daily Telegraph*
Picking up connected characters from her 1996 National Book Award-winning story collection Ship Fever, the latest from Barrett follows her Pulitzer Prize finalist Servants of the Map. In the fall of 1916, as the U.S. involvement in WWI looms, the Adirondack town of Tamarack Lake houses a public sanitarium and private "cure cottages" for TB patients. Gossip about roommate changes, nurse visits, cliques and romantic connections dominate relations among the sick-mostly poor European immigrants-when they're not on their porches taking their rest cure. Intrigue increases with the arrival of Leo Marburg, an attractive former chemist from Odessa who has spent his years in New York slaving away at a sugar refinery, and of Miles Fairchild, a pompous and wealthy cure cottage resident who decides to start a discussion group, despite his inability to understand many of his fellow patients. As in Joshua Ferris's recent Then We Came to the End, Barrett narrates with a collective "we," the voice of the crowd of convalescents. Details of New York tenements and of the sanitarium's regime are vivid and engrossing. The plot, which hinges on the coming of WWI, has a lock-step logic, but its transparency doesn't take away from the timeliness of its theme: how the tragedy, betrayal and heartbreak of war extend far beyond the battlefield. (Oct.) Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information.
Andrea Barrett is in a class by herself. A near-perfect equipoise
between smooth storytelling and the suggestion of larger truths *
Newsday *
Few writers have mastered the historical novel as [Barrett] has...
Her re-creation of time and place remains glittering * The Times
*
This is a meticulously researched novel, and provides an edifying
glimpse into an odd, static world during a period when the world
outside was anything but static * Daily Telegraph *
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