Calgary Herald

Reign of error

- MAGGIE TRAPP

I hope people will read what I write and feel less alone. But I don’t write for anyone else. I write for myself. I write because I can’t understand my own brain and it’s really hard to get that out. Validate Me author Charly Cox

A Mistake Carl Shuker Counterpoi­nt In A Mistake, New Zealand author Carl Shuker conveys in gorgeous, heartbreak­ing detail the shock of catastroph­e and the ways we try to make sense of disaster after the fact.

The novel’s protagonis­t, Elizabeth Taylor, is, at 42, the youngest and only female consultant general surgeon at Wellington Hospital. She is also consumed by the long-ago story of the 1986 Challenger space shuttle disaster, the “most beautiful story of error” she’s ever read. She lingers over descriptio­ns of the catastroph­e, “the tower of light and smoke, the cold and the corkscrew of vapour collapsing in on itself and spreading like the skirts of a swooning actor in a period drama as she sinks to the sands ... one long white streamer falling to the ocean. The smoke curling, reshaping, morphing. Then it all pauses, at an end, descending, compressin­g, and fading away.”

Just as Elizabeth is gripped by the timeline of the Challenger disaster, A Mistake asks us to view and review Elizabeth’s own missteps, which, seen from conflictin­g viewpoints, appear disastrous. A Mistake wastes no time with throat clearing. From its first word we’re in the pivotal, high-stakes scene around which all else in the novel revolves. Elizabeth and her surgical team are attempting to help a female patient with advanced sepsis.

While Elizabeth is being scrutinize­d profession­ally, she is also drafting a response to the Royal London Journal of Medicine’s edits on a piece she co-wrote. Elizabeth writes her way into an increasing­ly trenchant argument against the

New Zealand Ministry of Health’s upcoming launch of “a system of open public reporting of the ‘results’ of New Zealand doctors and surgeons” — a proposal to shame surgeons based on their “outcomes.”

Shuker’s novel is the fascinatin­g story of the way various parties interpret and revise what they witnessed, events in telling ways. Shuker’s arresting prose renders the inconceiva­ble breathtaki­ng. He interleave­s the story of Elizabeth and her surgical team with that of the real-life events that led to the breaking apart of the Challenger, and in both instances we remain transfixed as a cataclysmi­c mistake unfolds.

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