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Ship fever : stories
    Barrett, Andrea.
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Co.,
Pub date: 1996.
Pages: 254 p. ;
ISBN: 039303853X
Item info: 2 copies available at Columbia Public Library.
Holdings
Columbia Public Library Copies Material Location
F BAR 2 Book Checked out
  1 Paperback On Display
  2 Paperback Checked out
  1 Paperback Fiction
Summary
1996 National Book Award Winner for Fiction. Distributed by Syndetic Solutions, Inc.
Publishers Weekly Review
The quantifiable truths of science intersect with the less easily measured precincts of the heart in these eight seductively stylish tales. In the graphic title novella, a self-doubting, idealistic Canadian doctor's faith in science is sorely tested in 1847 when he takes a hospital post at a quarantine station flooded with diseased, dying Irish immigrants fleeing the potato famine. The story, which deftly exposes English and Canadian prejudice against the Irish, turns on the doctor's emotions, oscillating between a quarantined Irish woman and a wealthy Canadian lady, his onetime childhood playmate. In ``The English Pupil,'' Swedish botanist Carolus Linnaeus, who brought order to the natural world with his system of nomenclature, battles the disorder of his own aging mind as he suffers from paralysis and memory loss at age 70. In ``The Behavior of the Hawkweeds,'' a precious letter drafted by Austrian monk Gregor Mendel, who discovered the laws of heredity, reverberates throughout the narrator's marriage to her husband, an upstate New York geneticist. Barrett (The Forms of Water) uses science as a prism to illuminate, in often unsettling ways, the effects of ambition, intuition and chance on private and professional lives. Copyright 1995 Cahners Business Information, Inc. From: Reed Elsevier Inc. Copyright Reed Business Information
Booklist Review
Barrett, author of The Middle Kingdom (1991), has used science as a conduit to understanding the human psyche in this gorgeously imagined story collection. She mixes historical figures, such as Gregor Mendel and Carolus Linnaeus, with those of her own invention in tales about the quest for insights into the workings of the natural world, including the human heart. The title piece, a gripping novella, takes place during Ireland's Great Famine, when tens of thousands made the cruel transatlantic journey to Canada, only to suffer the horrors of a raging typhus epidemic. A young, disenchanted Canadian doctor agrees to work at a quarantine station in the hope of impressing the woman he loves, but he is in for a rude shock. The understaffed station is in a state of absolute crisis, and emaciated immigrants are dying by the hundreds. In a quieter, more contemporary vein, Barrett combines science and love in "The Littoral Zone," a story about two marine biologists who fall in love, much to the dismay of their respective families. Barrett's stories are precise and concentrated, containing a truly remarkable wealth of psychology and social commentary. (Reviewed January 1 & 15, 1996)039303853XDonna Seaman From: Syndetics Solutions, Inc. Distributed by Syndetic Solutions, Inc.
Author Biography
Andrea Barrett has written four novels, she lives in Rochester, New York. Distributed by Syndetic Solutions, Inc.
Table of Contents
   The Behavior of the Hawkweeds 11
   The English Pupil 34
   The Littoral Zone 47
   Rare Bird 59
   Soroche 80
   Birds with No Feet 103
   The Marburg Sisters 123
   Ship Fever 159
   Acknowledgments 255
Distributed by Syndetic Solutions, Inc.

Childrens Literature Comprehensive Database Review

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Personal Author: Barrett, Andrea.
Title: Ship fever : stories / Andrea Barrett.
Publication info: New York : W. W. Norton & Co., 1996.
Physical descrip: 254 p. ; 22 cm.
Contents: The behavior of the hawkweeds -- The English pupil -- The littoral zone -- Rare bird -- Soroche -- Birds with no feet -- The Marburg sisters -- Ship fever.
Summary: One novella and seven stories dealing with science and set in the 19th Century. In The Behavior of the Hawkweeds, the spirit of Mendel, the discoverer of the laws of heredity, haunts a geneticist of whose work Mendel disapproves, in Birds with No Feet, Darwin's theory of evolution provides a zoologist with consolation for his personal misfortunes, while in The English Pupil, Linnaeus, who brought order to botany, must deal with the mental disorder of his advancing age. By the author of The Middle Kingdom.
Subject term: Scientists--Social life and customs--Fiction.
Subject term: Historical fiction, American.
Subject term: Short stories, American.
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