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It's Come to This

A Pandemic Diary

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

As New York becomes the world's hardest-hit city by the coronavirus, best-selling author and former New York Times columnist Laura Pedersen reports on how the populace is turned upside-down. Practically overnight millions of people went from living according to facts and figures to being at the mercy of fever and fate. It's Come to This chronicles the pandemic year as it unfolded, with every week bringing a new set of seemingly impossible challenges and contradictions. Pedersen explains how people became more interested in baby wipes than babies, and in board games over boardrooms, along with many other pandemic conundrums and curiosities, such as how the expressions "going viral" and "pass the Corona" would never sound the same.

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    • Kirkus

      In this memoir, a New Yorker offers reflections on the year of Covid-19, complete with a look at former President Donald Trump and his administration. From Covid-19's first appearance on the West Coast in the beginning of 2020 to the insurrection at the United States Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, Pedersen tracks the local, national, and global progression and consequences of the virus that would change everything during a year of stress, craziness, and an ever increasing death toll. It is hard to imagine anyone being able to make readers laugh--or at least chuckle--with such a narrative. But the author, who has written five plays and 18 books, composes paragraphs rich in sarcasm and irony. Although she is an unabashed progressive, even her beloved New Yorkers and their leaders do not always escape her sharp commentary. It is not long before Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Mayor Bill de Blasio become "Guv Dad" and "Mayor Mom," trying to get their millions of kids to behave and stay safe: "Mayor Mom wanted to talk things out and employ more 'social distancing ambassadors' for a socially distanced group hug. Guv Dad was having none of it." "Daft Uncle Donald" was always ready to exacerbate the parental discord with some new revelation: "We'd have very few cases if testing stopped." Acerbic wit notwithstanding, Pedersen's edgy memoir is an exhaustive, chronologically organized, and annotated compendium of the multitude of crises that roiled the country--the pandemic, the scarcity of Covid-19 tests, the death of George Floyd and the subsequent protests, historic hurricanes, an explosion of wildfires, and the dangerous miracle cures that were instantly debunked. Remember Trump pondering injecting disinfectants into the human body? The book is both political and personal--a newsreel of 2020 that viscerally and angrily captures the tragedy, confusion, and communal anxiety of the year from an author who lived in one of the country's first virus epicenters. At one point, Pedersen describes early June as New York City entered Phase 1 of the reopening: "Finally, we all had toilet paper, but the FDA announced a shortage of the antidepressant Zoloft and its generic equivalents." Familiar pandemic terrain revisited with a cathartic burst of articulate, biting political commentary.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. (Online Review)

    • Booklist

      Starred review from June 1, 2021
      This book is recommended by BlueInk Review, a fee-based review service devoted exclusively to self-published books. Booklist is happy to partner with BlueInk to bring you the best self-published titles for adults and youth. Stars reflect the decisions of BlueInk reviewers and editors.Lest the dizzying roller-coaster ride of the pandemic becomes a blur of press conferences, toilet-paper shortages, and, most seriously, a stupefying loss of life, Pedersen details 2020's events from a decidedly left-wing bent, with equal parts wit and solemnity. The author, a seasoned New Yorker, writes that as COVID spiraled from faraway China into a plague that ravaged the U.S., "We suddenly switched from Fear of Missing Out (FOMO) to Fear of Going Out (FOGO)," and retail curbside pick-up gave new meaning to "drive-by." She observes that "the city that never sleeps went to sleep." In addition to evoking appalling images of exhausted health-care workers and refrigerated trucks serving as morgues, Pedersen skillfully recalls the year's political polarization, blazing wildfires, police brutality, and Capitol insurrection, among other events. The intersection of these with the pandemic, she asserts, inexorably elevated the nation's collective anxiety. By validating our shared experience, Pedersen helps us reconcile feelings of anxiety and dismay. Moreover, she accomplishes this all with great humanity. This is a must-read for anyone trying to make sense of our tumultuous year.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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