Seven medical school friends navigate the emotional and physical devastation wrought by a global pandemic.
Written before the Covid-19 pandemic, this book navigates the implications of a global pandemic on seven midcareer doctors who first became friends in med school. Kira Marchand is an infectious disease specialist who works for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta; Candee Compton-Winfield is an emergency room doctor in New York City; Hannah Geier is an OB-GYN in San Diego, California; Georgia Brown is a urologist in San Diego; Vani Darshana is an internist in Berea, Kentucky; Zadie Anson is a pediatric cardiologist in Charlotte, North Carolina; and Emma Colley is a trauma surgeon in Charlotte. The friends are on vacation in Spain and Morocco when the pandemic first strikes, and the story follows them and the impact that the artiovirus, CARS-ArV, has on their group, the cities they live in, and their families. Kira, Candee, and Hannah are point-of-view main characters. The narrative arc of the story follows Kira, the infectious disease specialist, who finds herself in a situation in which she has to choose between the lives of her two children. Covid-19 does not exist in these pages, but it will be impossible for readers to divorce their own pandemic experiences from those they are reading about. Much time is spent discussing the virus and its effects, both initial and long-term. For some readers, the lengthy descriptions of the artiovirus and its medical effects might be too much, while others will find the details just right. The idealized societal and governmental response, however, will ring false to many.
A well-written apocalyptic tale about a global pandemic that is all too realistic.