FICTION

A Death-Struck Year

288p. Houghton Harcourt. 2014. Tr $17.99. ISBN 9780544164505; ebk. $17.99. ISBN 9780544306707.
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RedReviewStarGr 8 Up—Seventeen-year-old Cleo Berry frets over an uncertain future devoid of plans, dreams, and ambitions. However, when the Spanish influenza strikes her hometown of Portland, Oregon, she does not hesitate to volunteer for the American Red Cross. Lucier's vividly accurate description of the 1918 pandemic will make readers tremble over the teen's fate, wondering whether she will be next on the list of victims. Cleo faces the ultimate dilemma: Given a choice between herself and others, who will she choose in the face of calamity? The pace of the writing is swift, and the author spares little in her account of those afflicted and others who sacrificed their own lives to help save them: loved ones and strangers burying individuals on their own without burial societies, members of the Red Cross going door-to-door in search of the sick, and young people dying as easily as their elders from the disease. This first-person narrative is as much Cleo's coming-of-age story as it is a full historical account of the pandemic. The novel's strong voice intimately places readers directly into the dramatic plot right up to climactic ending. Nothing is sugarcoated, making this a difficult pick for the squeamish, who may not easily tolerate the abundant flow of blood and raging fever throughout. The mood of almost hopeless desperation that mounts toward the second half of the book cannot be readily shaken off. In the same vein of Laurie Halse Anderson's Fever 1793 (S. & S., 2000), Lucier's debut novel deserves a place in all high school collections.—Etta Anton, Yeshiva of Central Queens, NY
When the 1918 Spanish influenza pandemic strikes, seventeen-year-old Cleo responds to a call for volunteers from the Red Cross. She comes face-to-face not just with the invisible menace of the disease but also with anti-German sentiment and the mortality of her friends and loved ones. The setting of this novel, with meticulous but unobtrusive details, is remarkably realized.
Seventeen-year-old day student Cleo Berry is stuck at her boarding school dormitory in Portland, Oregon, while her older brother and his wife take an anniversary trip to San Francisco. Meanwhile, the 1918 Spanish influenza pandemic strikes with a vengeance. Not content to stay cooped up in the dorm, Cleo returns home and responds to a call for volunteers from the Red Cross. The health crisis seems to bring out the best and worst in people, and as Cleo comes face-to-face not just with the invisible menace of the disease but also with anti-German sentiment and the mortality of her friends and loved ones, she does a fair amount of growing up. The setting of this novel, with meticulous but unobtrusive details, is remarkably realized. It's a rare window into another time and place, one that invites readers to draw parallels to their own lives in contemporary times. Readers who like plucky heroines, coming-of-age stories, and historical fiction should enjoy this promising debut. jonathan hunt

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