Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

A pandemic conceived long before our current crisis

- By Chelsea Ciccone BookTrib By Kevin E. Ready, Saint Gaudens Inc., 382 pages, $18.99 week: — Last week: 1 Last week: 2 Last week: 3 Last week: — Last week 5 Last week: 8 Last week: 6 Last week: 4 Last week: — Last

“Viral” is not fiction meant to scare its readers. It is fiction meant to inform.

The world is facing a deadly new virus. Sound familiar? In this instance, I’m speaking of Kevin E. Ready’s fiction, not fact; however, this particular story says a lot about the current state of the world.

Ready’s novel “Viral” chronicles the moves of various individual­s across the globe as they encounter a new strain of avian flu.

The story begins in late February with two nursing students in Egypt, one of whom contracts the virus after contact with ill patients. Then, moving to northeaste­rn China, we meet Quan Li, the director of a poultry processing plant, as he deals with the sudden death of one of the plant’s flocks. At a conference in Maryland, we meet Dr. Zhao Xiang, the director of the Chinese vaccine production program, and Dr. Karen Llewellyn, whose recent promotion has her running a new government-owned vaccine plant in California. Back in China, a woman named Qiuyue, who works at one of the poultry processing plants, carries out her job not knowing that the dead birds she’s handling will infect her. In Los Angeles, Matt Relford, an officer at the sheriff ’s station, is sent on a civil eviction errand that exposes him to the virus.

The narrative unfolds both chronologi­cally and globally, moving forward a couple of days at a time while focusing on a number of characters from around the world — some, like Dr. Xiang and Dr. Llewellyn, we’ll cross paths with several times and others we’ll meet only once. We are privy to correspond­ence between and within countries and health organizati­ons as they all struggle to pinpoint the exact strain of flu and determine how it is spreading. Meanwhile, flights are being rerouted, people are being quarantine­d, and it is apparent that the end will not come without casualties.

Ready’s novel takes on a truly global perspectiv­e in the wake of a quickly spreading virus. From government officials to corporate employees to health care workers and scientists trying to develop a vaccine to the animals carrying the disease, his readers experience as big a picture of the pandemic as possible.

In our current climate, facing a real pandemic, readers may wish to shy away from books like “Viral,” choosing instead to read books that allow for escape. As I picked up this book, I’ll admit I was apprehensi­ve about diving headfirst into a novel that felt too much like reality, but the truth is that Ready’s work was not frightenin­g, nor did it remind me of the overwhelmi­ng sense of uncertaint­y we’ve all been experienci­ng over the past few months. Instead, “Viral” felt enlighteni­ng. I felt as if I had a better understand­ing of all the recent chaos because I wasn’t looking at a pandemic from the perspectiv­e of an individual person or nation. I was seeing the complex, global network of decisions and events that lead to the spread of a virus, followed by the steps to find a solution.

Ready’s novel tackles the roles that politics, religion and economics play in the process of understand­ing and dealing with a virus of this magnitude. He also sheds light on today’s immunizati­on industry alongside the numerous organizati­ons across the globe designed to control and prevent the spread of disease as well as promote health.

The author finished “Viral” earlier this year, having the unique and rather eerie opportunit­y to allow news coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic to inform his fictional story. In his afterword, Ready explains that his novel “is set a few years hence and pretends we have learned something from coronaviru­s” — one of the few prediction­s in his book we can all hope to be true.

“Viral” is not fiction meant to scare its readers. It is fiction meant to inform and, in some ways, it’s the herald of hope for our uncertain present. Although Ready’s work “was meant to be creative, not prophetic,” there is something to be said for understand­ing potential crises enough to accurately predict them.

HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. “Countdown 1945: The Extraordin­ary Story of the Atomic Bomb and the 116 Days That Changed the World” by Chris Wallace with Mitch Weiss (Avid Reader) 2. “How to Be an Antiracist” by Ibram X. Kendi (One World)

3. “Untamed” by Glennon Doyle (Dial) 4. “Magnolia Table, Volume 2: A Collection of Recipes for Gathering” by Joanna Gaines (Morrow)

5. “The Splendid and the Vile: A Saga of Churchill, Family, and Defiance During the Blitz” by Erik Larson (Crown)

6. “United States of Socialism: Who’s Behind It. Why It’s Evil. How to Stop It.” by Dinesh D’Souza (All Points)

7. “Relationsh­ip Goals: How to Win at Dating, Marriage, and Sex” by Michael Todd (WaterBrook)

8. “The Buddha and the Badass: The Secret Spiritual Art of Succeeding at Work” by Vishen Lakhiani (Rodale)

9. “Our Time Is Now: Power, Purpose, and the Fight for a Fair America” by Stacey Abrams (Holt)

10. “Get Out of Your Head: Stopping the Spiral of Toxic Thoughts” by Jennie Allen (WaterBrook)

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