From the Pulitzer Prize–winning author of The Looming Tower, and the pandemic novel The End of October:
an unprecedented, momentous account of Covid-19—its origins, its
wide-ranging repercussions, and the ongoing global fight to contain it
From
the fateful first moments of the outbreak in China to the storming of
the U.S. Capitol to the extraordinary vaccine rollout, Lawrence Wright’s
The Plague Year tells the story of Covid-19 in authoritative,
galvanizing detail and with the full drama of events on both a global
and intimate scale, illuminating the medical, economic, political, and
social ramifications of the pandemic.
Wright takes us inside the
CDC, where a first round of faulty test kits lost America precious time
. . . inside the halls of the White House, where Deputy National
Security Adviser Matthew Pottinger’s early alarm about the virus was met
with confounding and drastically costly skepticism . . . into a Covid
ward in a Charlottesville hospital, with an idealistic young woman
doctor from the town of Little Africa, South Carolina . . . into the
precincts of prediction specialists at Goldman Sachs . . . into
Broadway’s darkened theaters and Austin’s struggling music venues . .
. inside the human body, diving deep into the science of how the virus
and vaccines function—with an eye-opening detour into the history of
vaccination and of the modern anti-vaccination movement. And in this
full accounting, Wright makes clear that the medical professionals
around the country who’ve risked their lives to fight the virus reveal
and embody an America in all its vulnerability, courage, and potential.
In
turns steely-eyed, sympathetic, infuriated, unexpectedly comical, and
always precise, Lawrence Wright is a formidable guide, slicing through
the dense fog of misinformation to give us a 360-degree portrait of the
catastrophe we thought we knew.
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