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The Prisoner of Hell Gate
The Prisoner of Hell Gate: A Novel | Dana I. Wolff
3 posts | 4 read | 2 to read
FOUR DECADES AFTER TYPHOID MARY WENT TO HER GRAVE, FIVE CURIOUS GRADUATE STUDENTS STRUGGLE TO ESCAPE ALIVE FROM THE ABANDONED ISLAND THAT ONCE IMPRISONED HER. CONTAGION DOESN’T DIE. IT JUST WAITS. In the Hell Gate section of New York’s East River lie the sad islands where, for centuries, people locked away what they most feared: the contagious, the disfigured, the addicted, the criminally insane. Here infection slowly consumed the stricken. Here a desperate ship captain ran his doomed steamship aground and watched flames devour 1,500 souls. Here George A. Soper imprisoned the infamous Typhoid Mary after she spread sickness and death in Manhattan’s most privileged quarters. George’s great-granddaughter, Karalee, and her fellow graduate students in public health know that story. But as they poke in and out of the macabre hospital rooms of abandoned North Brother Island—bantering, taking pictures, recalling history—they are missing something: Hidden evil watches over them—and plots against them. When death visits Hell Gate, it comes to stay. As darkness falls, the students find themselves marooned—their casual trespass having unleashed a chain of horrific events beyond anyone’s imagination. Disease lurks among the eerie ruins where Typhoid Mary once lived and breathed. Ravenous flies swarm puddles of blood. Rot and decay cling to human skin. And spiteful ghosts haunt the living and undead. Soon five students of history will learn more than they ever wanted to know about New York’s foul underbelly: the meaning of spine-tingling cries down the corridor, of mysterious fires, of disfiguring murder, and of an avenging presence so sinister they’d rather risk their lives than face the terror of one more night.
LibraryThing
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JesNel
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This is getting really spooky, guys! Loving The Prisoner of Hell Gate.

I do appreciate the author, Dana I. Wolff, mentioning the newer perspective on Mary Mallon and all she went through. Reminded me of a book from a grad school seminar on history of disease: Typhoid Mary: Captive of the Public's Health by Judith Walzer Leavitt. Crafts her story as a human, not a monster.

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review
Chrys
Mehso-so

This book was a lot like reading a horror movie. Cookie-cutter collegiates running around where they shouldn't be. I did like the history, and the character of Mary was interesting, but the rest was pretty forgettable.

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Chrys
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I love history, horror, and epidemiology; so have high hopes for this being a good read

MrBook Wow. Eager to know your verdict. 8y
3 likes1 comment