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Fifteen-year-old Marie-Claire Cote and her two siblings watch in horror as their beloved vagabond uncle contracts and then dies from tuberculosis. Then all three children in the Manitoba farm also are diagnosed with TB and moved to a nearby sanitorium where they are expected to rest and recover. The author describes vividly the uncertainty associated with the disease and its sufferers as well as the various treatments used to help the patients regain their health. The passages detailing how they
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30 October 2011 QUEEN OF HEARTS by Martha Brooks, Farrar Straus and Giroux, August 2011, 214p., ISBN: 978-0-374-34985-1
"Sister Therese, walking by my desk with her yardstick, pokes me awake on several occasions throughout the fall and early winter. One December day she keeps me after school. She stretches her long legs in front of her, her cracked black shoes showing below her long black skirts. Sister Therese and I love and hate each other in equal measures.
"Today I love her. I wasn't looking ...more
"Sister Therese, walking by my desk with her yardstick, pokes me awake on several occasions throughout the fall and early winter. One December day she keeps me after school. She stretches her long legs in front of her, her cracked black shoes showing below her long black skirts. Sister Therese and I love and hate each other in equal measures.
"Today I love her. I wasn't looking ...more

"In my heart of hearts, I've always wanted a sixteenth birthday party. Yet even though it falls on an apparently special day, winter solstice, I'm not holding my breath - no pun intended.
Sunday again. Six days after me pneumothorax, the great day has at last arrived, finding Signy, the rick city girl, and me, the poor country girl, sitting, as usual, on bedpans.
TB, I'm beginning to discover, is a democratic kind of disease. The only requirement seems to be that you have lungs."
Marie-Claire Cote ...more
Sunday again. Six days after me pneumothorax, the great day has at last arrived, finding Signy, the rick city girl, and me, the poor country girl, sitting, as usual, on bedpans.
TB, I'm beginning to discover, is a democratic kind of disease. The only requirement seems to be that you have lungs."
Marie-Claire Cote ...more

I read this book because it has been chosen as a Vermont Dorothy Canfield Fisher finalist for 2012-2013. It is an historical fiction piece about a young teen-aged girl who is placed in a tuberculosis sanitorium along with her younger brother and sister. I was fascinated by the treatments that occurred, even stopping to look up facts on the Internet, especially that they would have the patients sleep outside, even in the cold. In fact, while reading the book I talked to an old friend who had an u
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I enjoyed this book and felt that I learned a lot from it about a time period which is largely ignored by history and literature. Reading the victim's experience in a sanatorium during the tuberculosis outbreak in Canada helped me understand how society largely ignored and even feared these innocent people.There is no real happy ending in this book; although, Marie Claire comes away from the sanatorium having fallen in love and made a friend. Many other patients did not have so fortunate an expe
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I learned a great deal about how TB was treated back in the 1940s. I felt that this author developed her characters well, but she ended the book very abruptly. She needed to either speed up the pace or lengthen the novel to make the story's ending satisfactory.
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Jan 09, 2011
Kat Drennan-Scace
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Jul 13, 2011
Jess
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Sep 01, 2011
Jennifer
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Feb 29, 2012
EL
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Sep 22, 2013
Rebekah
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Nov 05, 2014
Kelly A
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