The Columbus Dispatch

Book illustrate­s pandemic’s impact on lives

- Andrew Demillo

“Voices from the Pandemic” by Eli Saslow (Doubleday)

More than 18 months into the coronaviru­s pandemic, there’s already been a bumper crop of books about COVID-19 that have focused primarily on the policy failures that allowed the virus to spread.

Eli Saslow’s “Voices from the Pandemic” instead draws attention to the people who have been affected by the virus.

Originally a series that ran in the Washington Post and won a George Polk Award for oral history, “Voices from the Pandemic” offers numerous examples of the heartbreak­ing, infuriatin­g and even inspiring ways COVID-19 has changed our world.

The stories range from the partner of the first patient in Indiana to die from COVID-19 to a Kentucky patient describing what it felt like to be intubated. A Georgia coroner describes the haunting reality of watching his community ravaged by the virus. A Connecticu­t woman shares the pain she feels after passing the virus on to her elderly mother.

The stories illustrate the other ways the pandemic has upended lives, including a woman evicted from her home and a mother struggling with virtual learning for her children while schools were closed.

Reading a book like this in the midst of the delta variant’s surge may seem like a depressing pursuit, but it feels oddly cathartic. So many of the emotions and experience­s are familiar. This collection is a reminder of how much we all share in common during a time of great loss. A chapter on the fight over masks that features a general store employee struggling with customers who refuse to wear them and an Arizona man who goes into stores to demonstrat­e against their mandate feels particular­ly resonant.

In the only “official” voice, the book begins with quotes from briefings from the World Health Organizati­on early on in the pandemic. One passage feels particular­ly chilling.

“Are we ready to fight rumors and misinforma­tion with clear and simple messages that people can understand? Are we able to have our people on our side to fight this outbreak?” the passage reads.

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