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170 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2001
Disease knows no barriers. No justice. No fairness. No mercy. It cannot be reasoned with. It must be fought. And I am going to fight it. — Charlotte McKenzie
Warnings: Character death
I really enjoyed this, reading it in two sittings over about 18 hours (including ugly hours of the am fu** insomnia). I liked the writing style and format, a diary was a perfect choice for talking about the 'Plague of the Spanish Lady' aka The Spanish Flu. There are some very clear flaws if you choose to think about the rules given to Charlotte McKenzie by Dr Banes but it is worth saying that the intended audience for Greenwood's book is much younger than me.
Charlotte is gorgeous, she is the kind of inspiring character that is needed in realistic style works for this demographic. She knows what she wants and is willing to fight for it. But she isn't perfect, her father suffers from shell shock (what we call PTSD) she is not able to cope with him, with the loss of her father, he is not the father she knew and it is draining her (a feeling I know well). As the oldest daughter (16 I think) in a mid-size family, she does a lot of housework and will not continue schooling beyond her current level. Her best friend, Florence, is the daughter of the local doctor, Florence sneaks Charlotte one of her father's textbooks to aid her in caring for her father. Charlotte is caught and impresses Dr Banes with her intelligence. This becomes useful when Dr Banes needs a new assistant and asks to take on Charlotte. This is her foray into medicine, becoming a nurse to those who need it during the pandemic. She meets and aids a variety of characters from the three gypsies to returned soldiers to essentially orphaned children. All of which help her develop. Her development over a fairly short space of time is remarkable.
Greenwood does a fairly good just of pulling the reader into the closing moments of WWI and the Spanish Flu pandemic. The expected experiences and class differences are explained well, in language that is readable. She doesn't use modern language where it can be avoided. Honestly the more you know about this time period the more you will appreciate this work as a youngling or an adult. This is not the first Kerry Greenwood book I have read, she is famed for her Phyrne Fisher novels, which I have read. The writing style has been correctly altered to fit the demographic while maintaining a strong female voice and that want to exceed societal limits. Charlotte has some similarities to Miss Fish, she feels like a younger version of Phyrne but poor. Maybe more like Miss Fish's friend Dr Elizabeth MacMillan, which feels very much like what Charlotte is aiming for. I can see Charlotte McKenzie becoming vehemently passionate about the care for people, especially women even if here it is the downtrodden.
Everyone on Curlow Street was asleep except for Curly, who was sitting on the front porch with a tall man.
'A sheila!' said the man, grabbing for my arm. I was affronted, and so was Curly. He swung his crutch around and stood up.
'She's not a shiela, you blank of a blank blank,' he snarled. 'She's a nurse, and if you don't let go of her I'll blanking break your arm.'
'Sorry, Miss,' stammered the man—one of our patients, I saw. 'Meant no offence, Miss.'
'None taken,' I said, one of Mum's phrases. — Patient, Curly and Charlotte (Curly is one of the soldiers met fairly in Charlotte's helping Dr Banes)
Read for POPSUGAR Reading Challenge 2023. Filling prompt #34 "A historical fiction book"
This is set in 1918-19 as the Spanish Flu reaches Melbourne. It was quite popular in Australia, especially in school libraries during the covid pandemic. We had some of the longest lockdowns in the world, I think only some Chinese provinces had more time locked down than us.
A representative gif:
My apologies for this messy and probably useless review