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Voices from the Pandemic

Americans Tell Their Stories of Crisis, Courage and Resilience

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A powerful and cathartic portrait of a country grappling with the Covid-19 pandemic—from feeling afraid and overwhelmed to extraordinary resilient—told through voices of people from all across America • From the Pulitzer Prize–winning reporter and author of Rising Out of Hatred
The Covid-19 pandemic was a world-shattering event, affecting everyone in the nation. From its first ominous stirrings, renowned journalist Eli Saslow began interviewing a cross-section of Americans to capture their experiences in real time: An exhausted and anguished EMT risking his life in New York City; a grocery store owner feeding his neighborhood for free in locked-down New Orleans; an overwhelmed coroner in Georgia; a Maryland restaurateur forced to close his family business after forty-six years; an Arizona teacher wrestling with her fears and her obligations to her students; rural citizens adamant that the entire pandemic is a hoax, and retail workers attacked for asking customers to wear masks; patients struggling to breathe and doctors desperately trying to save them.
Through Saslow's masterful, empathetic interviewing, we are given a kaleidoscopic picture of a people dealing with the unimaginable. These deeply personal accounts constitute a crucial, heartbreaking record of the sweep of experiences during this troubled time, and show us America from its worst and to its resilient best.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from August 2, 2021
      Drawing on interviews with more than 200 Americans conducted between March 2020 and January 2021, Pulitzer winner Saslow (Rising Out of Hatred) paints in this fascinating oral history an essential portrait of how the Covid-19 pandemic “became personal to each of us.” In one of the book’s most heartbreaking pieces, a young man discusses his guilt over throwing a party that resulted in the Covid-related deaths of several of his family members. Elsewhere, a grandmother recounts being evicted from her apartment after her temp agency work dried up, and a New York City paramedic notes that he pronounced more deaths during the first two weeks of April 2020 than in his previous 26 years on the job. The terrifying experience of falling sick is examined through the stories of a 52-year-old mother who died after the virus “kept assaulting her body for months until it was too much to handle,” and a former Division I athlete whose lingering symptoms include brain fog and extreme fatigue. Saslow also includes the dueling perspectives of a 63-year-old asthmatic store clerk striving to keep herself safe and a man who says his refusal to wear a mask is “about protecting our freedom and rising above all this political propaganda.” The breadth of Saslow’s reporting astonishes, as does the directness and vulnerability of his interview subjects. This powerful, unputdownable account should be required reading. Agent: Esther Newberg, ICM Partners.

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  • English

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