Chattanooga Times Free Press

BATTERED BY THE BOMB

WITHIN A LOVE TRIANGLE, BROKEN CHARACTERS SEEK HEALING FROM THE WOUNDS OFWAR

- BY TINA CHAMBERS CHAPTER16.ORG For more local book coverage, visit Chapter16.org, an online publicatio­n of Humanities Tennessee.

“ATOMIC LOVE” by Jennie Fields (G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 368 pages, $26).

The war is over, but deep and debilitati­ng scars remain in Nashville writer Jennie Fields’ novel “Atomic Love,” set in 1950s Chicago. Former Manhattan Project physicist Rosalind Porter has left the scientific community and taken a low-paying, mundane job at Marshall Field’s department store. Rosalind is still grief-stricken and wracked with guilt over the part she played in the developmen­t of the atomic bombs that devastated Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

“The Manhattan Project’s darling vaporized nursing mothers, little girls cradling dolls, old women pouring tea, men too ancient to fight,” she laments. “It sucked their houses into winds of flame, shattered their hospitals and schools. It dropped an entire town into the sun and the Americans laughed while it burned. And then they chose another town and did the same.” Her own personal losses, especially betrayal at the hands of the man she loved, physicist Thomas Weaver, proved to be the final straw, and she has worked hard to put distance between the groundbrea­king scientist she was and the cheerless, unapproach­able woman she has become.

Once a prodigy, Rosalind graduated from high school at 16, becoming the youngest female ever admitted to the University of Chicago. Mentored by Nobel Prize winner Enrico Fermi, she excelled in her career as a nuclear physicist — until everything fell apart. Having suffered a series of losses, Rosalind narrowly escaped the war years with her sanity: “First she lost her father; then she lost Weaver; for a while she lost her mind; and then her job. It all crashed down. And her love for science, already battered by the bomb, collapsed in on itself.”

It comes as a shock to her carefully constructe­d post-war life when FBI agent Charlie Szydlo suddenly appears and asks her to spy on Weaver, who is suspected of treason. The war years were particular­ly grueling for Charlie, an idealistic, kindhearte­d man who barely survived a prisoner-of-war camp in Japan. With a mutilated hand and a broken spirit, Charlie is embarrasse­d to be alive when so many others are not: “Sitting in the taxi … the lights of the city streaking by, he sees a world rebuilding itself higher and mightier every day — to prove what? That America’s survived. Every skyscraper a desire to forget and look to the future. All built on scars.”

Charlie finally persuades Rosalind that the truth about her former lover must be uncovered, for the sake of both national security and her own peace of mind. As she spends time with Weaver, she realizes that her feelings for him are as strong as ever, although complicate­d by her burgeoning attraction to Charlie and his to her. The new Weaver is apologetic and solicitous and obviously keeping secrets, yet Rosalind can’t believe him capable of working with the Russians. As the stakes grow ever higher, however, Rosalind finds herself in real danger and no longer able to hold life at arm’s length.

Fields has crafted a page-turning romantic mystery set in a time and place both familiar and foreign, a story of scientific marvels, wartime atrocities and secret agents fighting the Cold War. The inspiratio­ns for her story include Leona Woods, the only female and youngest member of the Chicago team of physicists involved in the Manhattan Project; Fields’ mother, a biochemist; and her aunt, who was a clerical worker for the Manhattan Project. With such real-life models to draw upon, Fields brings to vivid life a fascinatin­g period in American history by depicting flawed human characters seeking healing, redemption, love and hope in a world made bleak by the horrors of man’s inhumanity to man … and woman.

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 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO BY ANTHONY SCARLATI ?? Jennie Fields
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO BY ANTHONY SCARLATI Jennie Fields

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