Saturday, February 12, 2011

Fever Season: The Story of a Terrifying Epidemic and the People Who Saved a City PDF

Rating: (16 reviews) Author: Visit Amazon's Jeanette Keith Page ISBN : 9781608192229 New from $19.59 Format: PDF
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From Booklist

Journalist-historian Keith’s account of the yellow-fever epidemic that raced through Memphis, Tennessee, in 1879 ably portrays both the honors and the dishonors earned during that terrifying three-month period as the illness hit two-thirds of the Memphis population, killing more than one-fourth (more than 5,000). Using the prisms of time and firsthand accounts, she lays bare many of the systemic problems—politics, racism, greed, and lingering Civil War resentment—that failed to protect the health and safety of all Memphians. A good place to conduct business, the city proved a poor place to live. As in any crisis, there were many unsung and unexpected heroes as well as a number of ignoble cowards who abandoned civic posts, religious congregations, and even their own families to save themselves. Sadly, though it is true that many lessons were learned and ultimately Memphis became a far better place to live, recent global crises elsewhere have demonstrated that some lessons never sink in. --Donna Chavez

Review

“Fascinating—and potentially instructive—to today’s reader … an unqualified success.”—Boston Globe

"Testifies to a fact worth bearing in mind in the future. ‘Epidemics strip away social pretensions,’ Keith writes, ‘and show us for what we are…'"--Laura Miller, Salon
 
“This is rewarding history.”—Jim Landers, The Dallas Morning News

“A highly rewarding and essential telling of a story that captivated late-19th century America and did much to reshape Memphis history.... Keith…warns the reader up front that there is no happy ending to the story she tells.... Good for her, because this story is so important and riveting that it needs no tidy, triumphant, Hollywood-style conclusion.”—Tom Charlier, The Commercial Appeal (Memphis)

“[A] vivid, novelistic account of [Memphis] during its worst hours…. Fever Season reminds us of what it takes for human beings - regardless of politics, class, job description or skin color - to preserve dignity and save lives. Even a brief season of such courage should never be forgotten.”—Gina Webb, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

“Using a rich collection of letters, newspapers, and diaries, Keith intertwines the lives of prominent figures and ordinary citizens who faced the chaos … succeeds in creating a vivid image of the Memphis of 1878”—The Lancet
 
"Macabre and fascinating reading…  Keith's fine history is a reminder, though, that we will have other plagues, and they will not be merely city-wide, and we will find them as incomprehensible and frightening as Memphis did, and we will again be surprised at who turns hero and who turns coward.”—Rob Hardy, The Dispatch (Columbus, MS)

“Keith delivers a rewarding must-read for both history and public health buffs.”—Publishers Weekly(starred review)

"Keith does not exaggerate its historical significance but delivers an admirable account of a Southern city doing its best to deal with a frightening, incomprehensible epidemic."—Kirkus Reviews

"Journalist-historian Keith’s account of the yellow-fever epidemic that raced through Memphis, Tennessee, in 1879 ably portrays both the honors and the dishonors earned during that terrifying three-month period as the illness hit two-thirds of the Memphis population, killing more than one-fourth (more than 5,000). Using the prisms of time and firsthand accounts, she lays bare many of the systemic problems—politics, racism, greed, and lingering Civil War resentment—that failed to protect the health and safety of all Memphians. A good place to conduct business, the city proved a poor place to live. As in any crisis, there were many unsung and unexpected heroes as well as a number of ignoble cowards who abandoned civic posts, religious congregations, and even their own families to save themselves. Sadly, though it is true that many lessons were learned and ultimately Memphis became a far better place to live, recent global crises elsewhere have demonstrated that some lessons never sink in."—Donna Chavez, Booklist.com

“Jeanette Keith’s compelling account of one of nineteenth-century America’s worst disasters vividly illustrates how noble, and how ignoble, human beings can be in a crisis. This is a masterful work of narrative history—gracefully written, richly informative, and deeply thoughtful. It should be read by everyone interested in America’s past and everyone who has ever wondered what it is like to experience utter catastrophe.”—Stephen V. Ash, Professor of History, University of Tennessee, author of Firebrand of Liberty

“Bravo! Jeanette Keith is an exceptional writer who takes us on a voyage through the trauma of the 1878 yellow fever epidemic in Memphis. Her insights draw a vivid picture of how important it is to understand that individuals can make a huge difference in the everyday life of a city and its future. The late nineteenth-century was a time of dramatic change in a United States reshaped by war, economic turmoil, complexities of ethnic and racial diversity, as well as high unemployment, and globalization. There is much to learn from this story that could help with today’s similar cornucopia of challenges.”—Kriste Lindemeyer, Dean of the Rutgers-Camden Faculty of Arts and Sciences, author of The Greatest Generation Grows Up

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Direct download links available for PRETITLE Fever Season: The Story of a Terrifying Epidemic and the People Who Saved a City Hardcover POSTTITLE
  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Press; 1 edition (October 2, 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1608192229
  • ISBN-13: 978-1608192229
  • Product Dimensions: 1.1 x 6.3 x 9.4 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)

Fever Season: The Story of a Terrifying Epidemic and the People Who Saved a City PDF

It used to be that southern communities would expect attacks of yellow fever every summer; it was as natural as the rise in the temperatures. The fever would come, linger through the hot months, and go. Some people would die from it, and then it would be over. The attack of yellow fever that hit Memphis in 1878 was extreme in its numbers, killing around a tenth of the 50,000 citizens, with the number that low because most of the others had fled the city. We have new plagues, and we don't worry much in this country anymore about yellow fever, but the story of the Memphis attack makes for macabre and fascinating reading in _Fever Season: The Story of a Terrifying Epidemic and the People Who Saved a City_ (Bloomsbury Press) by historian Jeanette Keith. This is a classic plague tale, with participants unpredictably turning into heroes or cowards. The devastation fascinated newspaper readers across the nation at the time, but Keith might also be writing about readers of this very book: "The people who read of the plague summer in the daily papers were as fascinated by the vagaries of character as the firsthand observers in Memphis. It is almost comical how surprised they were - how surprised we all are - when the same things happened in Thucydides's Athens, Boccaccio's Florence, Defoe's London, and in every major epidemic, over and over again."

This is a study of yellow fever's effects on Memphis for one disastrous season. People in 1878 might have blamed filth or miasma for illnesses, but no one knew that yellow fever was spread by mosquitoes, and Memphis, with limited water supply, had thousands of household cisterns where the mosquitoes liked to lay eggs. When Memphis citizens knew the fever was coming, those who could fled, leaving a small minority in the grim city.

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