Alive with narrative ingenuity, and tinged with humor as well as sorrow, this inspired recreation of a forgotten era powerfully reminds us how much individual voices matter—in history and in life.
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Lydia's experiences are annotated with marginal comments from the dead (literally marginal: the remarks are in a smaller type in the outside margins of the text). This "whispering undercurrent" rises into articulation when one of the dead feels an urge to comment on Lydia's memories. The statements of the dead can be funny or poignant (e.g. "Jefferson Carver, the Public Health Services first colored elevator operator and the car¹s fourth occupant, has become resigned to his omission from the partial memories of his white passengers."), but most often correct fine points in the narrative or complain about slights and oversights. The dead have a "shared desire: that in an unguarded moment, Our whisperings will broach a living ear." Sadly, they don't have much more to contribute than the kind of cantankerous ego-babble we expect from the living.
Although this chorus of the dead is a brave innovation, it fails Wickett¹s Remedy because the perspective of eternity lessens the force of Lydia's story. It would lessen anyone's story. It may be more realistic to view our sufferings and ambitions--our very personalities--as specks in a cosmic blur, but it puts a damper on our wilder emotions. --Regina Marler --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
just wonderful,
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This review is from: Wickett's Remedy: A Novel (Hardcover)
Wickett's rememedy is awkward and weird and perfect. It's ridiculous and sad and so very engaging. Another reviewer complained that the cosmic perspective of the novel dwarfed Lydia Wickett's experiences, and I think that's exactly right, and just as it should be. The novel isn't really about telling any particular person's story. The novel is much more about how life unfolds senselessly and uncontrollably; how very little is within our control. Stupid decisions work out well, painstaking decisions work terribly. But in the end, everyone ends up in the same place, and every experience is precious. It's deeper and more mature than Bee Season, in which every character was desperately trying to find some greater order in the universe, around which they could form their lives, and that greater order was strongly implied.
41 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Flu Epidemic of 1918 As Seen By The Dead,
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This review is from: Wickett's Remedy: A Novel (Hardcover)
Myla Goldberg has written a charming, quirky and strange book (just look at the front cover). This is not a conventional novel but a creative one if the reader gives it a chance. The central event of the novel is the influenza pan-epidemic during World War I as seen through the eyes of a married couple in Boston and of the souls who have perished of the flu in 1918.
Ms. Goldberg stretches out her book to the 1990's by the device of following the strange corporate history of the husband's invention, Wickett's Remedy. While the story covers a lot of ground (there is a sub-plot involving unethical medical testing by the US Government), the characters, even as they die off, are compelling. In a book about death, this wonderful novel reaffirms life in its own fashion. For further historical background, the reader is referred to John Barry's "The Great Influenza" which tells how 20 million persons worldwide perished from this deadly virus.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Fascinating, sometimes irritating, novel,
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This review is from: Wickett's Remedy: A Novel (Hardcover)
There is absolutely no doubt that Goldberg is a masterful prose writer. Bee Season was not a fluke, and she demonstrates that she's more than capable of getting inside the heads of disparate characters-- not just Jewish characters from this century and people who might be like her, but people separate from her in time and ethnicity. Whether or not you end up loving this novel's plot, her sentences and descriptions are really gorgeous.
This time she writes about Lydia Kilkenny, an Irish girl from Boston's South End at the turn of the century, who becomes a shop girl at Gilchrist's in a swankier part of town, is courted by and marries Henry Wickett, a shy medical student who quits to sell "Wickett's Remedy." Henry dies of illness, and Lydia becomes a nurse during the influenza epidemic of 1918, taking part in a failed experiment on Gallup's island. Meanwhile, her husband's "business partner" has taken the original remedy and turned it into a bestselling soda, and we see letters from Lydia in the twenties trying to get some money owed her out of Driscoll, as well as Driscoll's letters to his dead wife and son, and various press releases and newsletters from QD soda which seems to be a sort of cult (I've been to the coke museum in Atlanta and it doesn't seem that even coke has the same weird culture Goldberg imagines for QD soda). Documents from 1993 describe a jubilee, and Driscoll's confession that a dead woman invented the soda (but a newsletter suggests this was treated as a joke, though not clearly by his adopted son who according to dcouments from the nursing home has since neglected Driscoll's care). Lydia's story also has marginalia from the whisperings of dead people commenting and contradicting on the narrative. I loved that. I was a lot less interested in all of the QD soda materials and tended to skim them. Each chapter ended with these, as well as excerpts from newspaper articles about the epidemic, and odd unrelated sequences of dialogue from patients, soldiers, random people. Very post-modern, but the only part of it that really worked for me was the marginalia. I was a lot more interested in Lydia than in Driscoll. But Lydia takes up 90% of the book and I found her story very satisfying somehow. OK, maybe it's true there isn't a lot of tension, but I really liked her and felt for her as she saw loved ones die and cared for soldiers she feared might die. Goldberg really evokes the time and place very well, and this is a worthwhile novel!
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