Available Formats
The Desperate Hours: One Hospital's Fight to Save a City on the Pandemic's Front Lines
By (Author) Marie Brenner
Flatiron Books
Flatiron Books
25th October 2022
United States
General
Non Fiction
Local history
History of medicine
Coping with / advice about illness and specific health conditions
Infectious and contagious diseases
Health systems and services
362.19624140
Hardback
496
Width 167mm, Height 243mm, Spine 42mm
790g
In the spring of 2020, COVID-19 arrived in New York City. Before long, America's largest metropolis was at war against a virus that mercilessly swept through its five boroughs. It became apparent that if Covid wasn't somehow halted, the death count in New York alone would be in the hundreds of thousands. And if New York's hospitals failed, what chance did the rest of the country have In The Desperate Hours, award-winning journalist Marie Brenner, having been granted unprecedented 18-month access to the entire New York-Presbyterian hospital system, tells the story of the doctors, nurses, residents, researchers, and suppliers who tried to save lives across Manhattan, Queens, and Brooklyn and the northern periphery of the city. Drawing on more than 200 interviews, Brenner takes us inside secure ICU units, sealed operating rooms, locked executive suites, unknown basement workshops, and makeshift clinics to provide extraordinary witness to the war as it was waged on the front line. But The Desperate Hours is more than a thrilling account of medicine under extreme pressure. It is an intimate portrait of courageous men and women coming together in their devotion to duty, their families, each other, and the city they loved more than any other.
Fascinating and harrowing. . . . Brenner draws sharp, sympathetic profiles . . . and vividly captures moments of heartbreak and celebration. --Publishers Weekly (starred review)
Urgent. . . . Brenner creates a tense, stirring picture of the impact of Covid-19 on New York-Presbyterian Hospital's campuses. . . . [Her] probing investigation includes animated profiles of a large cast of characters, creating a palpable sense of trauma, pain, and vulnerability in what one cardiologist characterized as nothing less than war. --Kirkus (starred review)
Marie Brenner is the author of seven books and writer at large for Vanity Fair. She has been a staff writer at The New Yorker, a contributing editor at New York, and has won numerous awards for her reporting around the world. Her expos of the tobacco industry was the basis for the 1999 movie The Insider, which was nominated for seven Academy Awards, including Best Picture. She is also a producer of the 2019 documentary Where's My Roy Cohn