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#epidemic
review
OutsmartYourShelf
Quarantined | Joe Mckinney
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Panpan

San Antonio, Texas has had an outbreak of a particularly virulent & deadly form of flu & have been cut off from the outside world by a perimeter wall built around the city. Hundreds are dying every day & have to be buried in mass graves. Det Lily Harris works collating burial statistics & notices a body that doesn't seem to have been autopsied & a bullet wound suggests that this is a murder victim hidden amongst the other dead.

OutsmartYourShelf As the police investigation intensifies, they uncover a conspiracy involving those in charge who are intent on hiding the truth from the public.

To say this was originally written over a decade before Covid, it sure got a lot of things right: masks, lockdowns, & staying so many metres apart. It could have been really good except for the fact that the MC, Lily, is a horrible person using fatphobic & homophobic language to describe people.
6d
OutsmartYourShelf In books like this where the MC is fighting for survival, the reader has to become invested in their story, but I really couldn't care less if Lily survived the pandemic or not. 2⭐

Full Review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/862208779
Read 29th Oct 2024

#Flerken #HauntedShelf 326 pts

#AfterDarkBingo #BodyCountBingo @puddlejumper
#31by31 @catsandbooks
#SupernaturalBookBingo (Fake ID)
#HalloweenAtoZReadathon #HalloweenAtoZBingo @texreader
6d
22 likes2 comments
quote
olivia.d
Fever 1793 | Laurie Halse Anderson

“The world is not as it should be. It is a place of chaos and fear.”

blurb
olivia.d
Fever 1793 | Laurie Halse Anderson

I would use this book if it aligned with the curriculum and the topic for that week

review
olivia.d
Fever 1793 | Laurie Halse Anderson
Mehso-so

I‘m not too familiar with the yellow fever epidemic so this was an interesting read for me. I liked how the story was portrayed

review
Hooked_on_books
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Pickpick

I previously read a fascinating book about the 2014 Ebola outbreak from a physician, but this one goes deeper. Farmer starts with that event then goes deeper into the past to show how Sierra Leone and Liberia came to be health care deserts via colonialism. You then comes forward again to show how radically different things could be with just basic supportive care. Terrific and sobering.

44 likes3 stack adds
review
quietlycuriouskate
Salvation City | Sigrid Nunez
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Pickpick

Assumed it was a COVID novel: nope, published in 2010!
A pandemic orphan, Cole is fostered by a fundamentalist pastor & his wife. They are good, kind people but their values and culture are poles apart from those of his liberal atheist parents. What's a boy to do when he loves them both?
The stuff about rapture children made me deeply uneasy.
Don't know why some of the plot points were introduced. Not sure how I feel about such a low key ending..

review
Megabooks
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Pickpick

Listening to this 22 hr audiobook is an investment but one that pays dividends. Farmer, a doctor on the frontlines of the 2014 Ebola crisis, writes about the history of Sierra Leone and Liberia from the slave trade and founding of these countries to the current politics and extractive trading. He explains why these countries are healthcare deserts from a historical perspective and gives ideas how we can better prepare for the next health crisis.

BarbaraBB You‘re my hero! 22 hours!! Did you recapture your love for audio? 5mo
Megabooks @BarbaraBB mostly yes! Although I have to be a lot more invested to finish a book now. 5mo
67 likes1 stack add2 comments
blurb
Megabooks
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So you may have noticed I haven‘t written an audiobook review in awhile. I‘m still listening to them, but I‘m not enjoying it as much. With all the aides coming and going, I rarely get uninterrupted listening time anymore. However, I decided to leap into a super-long (22 hour) one about the 2013-15 Ebola outbreak and an sociological history of those countries, and I‘m really enjoying it! It‘s a bit slow going, but maybe I‘ll love audio again!

Bookwormjillk Glad you got some audiobook time in. So hard with constant interruptions. I have this one in my TBR so will be looking for your review. 5mo
Lizpixie I‘d love to read this but am struggling to find the audiobook. Where did you get it from if I may ask? 5mo
squirrelbrain I hope it gets you back into audiobooking 🤞😘 5mo
See All 10 Comments
ImperfectCJ @Lizpixie I don't know where @Megabooks got it, but I'm seeing it on Libby (through Los Angeles Public Library but not through my smaller libraries), on Cloud Library through San Diego Public Library, and on libro.fm 5mo
ImperfectCJ @Lizpixie I don't know about availability outside the US, but the audiobook is published by Dreamscape Media: https://www.dreamscapepublishing.com/single-audiobook/?titleid=1772 5mo
Megabooks @Lizpixie hi! Sorry I went shopping all morning. I picked this up on Libro.fm. I think @squirrelbrain has used their website/audiobooks outside the US. They are DRM free. @ImperfectCJ 5mo
Megabooks @Bookwormjillk so far it‘s very worth the time investment! 5mo
squirrelbrain @Lizpixie - yes, I‘ve used Libro.fm here in the UK. I‘ve been gifted audiobooks through the site from Littens in the US, and have also been able to reciprocate with gifts back again. 5mo
BarbaraBB It sounds like your kind of book. I hope it will reconnect you with audio! 5mo
Megabooks @BarbaraBB it is my kind of book, and I‘m really enjoying it! 5mo
67 likes4 stack adds10 comments
review
Hooked_on_books
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Pickpick

This book is a fascinating look at the 1918 flu, focusing on the US and taking the time to set the stage in politics and medicine before the pandemic occurred. It‘s eminently readable and I didn‘t want to put it down. I do feel like it left a couple threads hanging, but that didn‘t take away from the book for me.

LeahBergen That face! ❤️ 7mo
AmyG Someone is wide awake! (And it‘s not you Holly 🤣) 7mo
53 likes2 stack adds2 comments
blurb
Sharpeipup
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Over generations, the gene pool of the first farmers became increasingly dominated by individuals who could drink beer on a regular basis. Most of the world‘s population today is made up of descendants of those early beer drinkers, and we have largely inherited their genetic tolerance for alcohol.🍻🍺

#quotes

29 likes1 stack add