A timely and nuanced book that sets the author’s experience as a
nursing home volunteer during the pandemic alongside the wisdom of
great thinkers who confronted their own plagues. In any time of
disruption or grief, many of us seek guidance in the work of great
writers who endured similar circumstances. During the first year of
the COVID-19 pandemic, historian and biographer Robert Zaretsky did
the same while also working as a volunteer in a nursing home in south
Texas. In Victories Never Last Zaretsky weaves his reflections on the
pandemic siege of his nursing home with the testimony of six writers
on their own times of plague: Thucydides, Marcus Aurelius, Michel de
Montaigne, Daniel Defoe, Mary Shelley, and Albert Camus, whose novel
The Plague provides the title of this book. Zaretsky delves into
these writers to uncover lessons that can provide deeper insight into
our pandemic era. At the same time, he goes beyond the literature to
invoke his own experience of the tragedy that enveloped his Texas
nursing home, one which first took the form of chronic loneliness and
then, inevitably, the deaths of many residents whom we come to know
through Zaretsky’s stories. In doing so, Zaretsky shows the power of
great literature to connect directly to one’s own life in a
different moment and time. For all of us still struggling to
comprehend this pandemic and its toll, Zaretsky serves as a thoughtful
and down-to-earth guide to the many ways we can come to know and make
peace with human suffering.
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Reading and Caregiving in a Time of Plague
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780226803524
Publisert
2022
Utgiver
University of Chicago Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter