The Second Life of Mirielle West by Amanda Skenandore tells the story of a California socialite shipped to the Carville leper colony in the 1920s. Her first telltale sign is a burn from an iron. She didn't feel the pain. Upon a doctor's inspection, the white patches of skin identified her as a leper. Aptly titled, this book highlights the difference between her first life (filled with the sorrows of a lost child, depression, and alcoholism) and her second life (lived in isolation at the national leprosarium).
According to The Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans, Carville was in operation between 1894 and 2005. Amanda Skenandore presents an engaging historical fiction based on the facts and details of both the dreaded disease and the imposed isolation. My heart ached for the children and adults forced into residence at Carville. Simultaneously, I respected the nurses and doctors who worked tirelessly to ease the patients' suffering and to seek a cure for leprosy. This is a tale worth visiting and one worth discussing in a book club.
1 comment:
Sounds interesting. We hardly hear of leprosy anymore, and I'm wondering if it's still around. (I loved the book The Gift of Pain, by Yancey and Brand).
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