6/24/2023 0 Comments Fever by mary beth keane![]() ![]() We experience her delight in her growing culinary skill. We feel the heroine’s determination to better herself. Keane writes in the third person, but with a subtly handled partial omniscience into Mary’s thoughts and feelings. During those years the Irish immigrant Mary, having climbed the ladder of domestic service from laundress to the relatively prestigious position of cook, is pursued and quarantined for the first time, for a period of three years, by board of health officials. The bulk of the book is devoted to the most dramatic decade of Mallon’s life, from 1900 to 1910. But Keane makes up for this absence of events by narrowing both the narrative arc and the point of view in doing so, she crafts an absorbing and beautifully written novel. Mallon, born in 1869, spent nearly three decades of her 69 years in quarantine at the order of the New York Department of Health her life before and between these episodes was hard, but not especially harder than that of other female immigrants of the period. For an author conjuring fiction from historical fact, perhaps the biggest challenge is this: how to sustain suspense when the reader already knows how the story will end? Mary Beth Keane solves this problem ingeniously in Fever, a novel based on the life of Mary Mallon, more commonly known as Typhoid Mary, or the first known asymptomatic carrier of typhoid fever. ![]()
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