A personal memoir of the last great polio epidemic, affecting 50,000 people, and of the author’s own experience of polio; a portrait of his parents, both radicals; and the story of the epidemic in Cork, Ireland, where the author and his family lived in the mid 1950s.
Patrick Oliver Cockburn is an Irish journalist who has been a Middle East correspondent since 1979 for the Financial Times and, presently, The Independent.
He has written four books on Iraq's recent history. He won the Martha Gellhorn Prize in 2005, the James Cameron Prize in 2006 and the Orwell Prize for Journalism in 2009.
I found this very interesting, my Poppy had polio and I never really understood what it was all about. But this book was amazing in the description of a child diagnised with polio and what the community at the time said must happen - even tho there was absolutely no evidence that it helped!! Well written and I often felt I was there with the young boy. A true and in some wat=ys surreal story, good!
This book was most interesting to read during Covid19 pandemic. Similarity was striking in terms of fear, lack of knowledge, lack of vaccine, isolation and tracing, hand-washing, business & political influence. As well as covering the polio epidemic in Cork, he gives some interesting researched information on the virus. Also a good social record of life of an Anglo Irish family in 1950s Ireland. Book is now out of print but available as ebook on Kindle.
Having read separate memoirs by the author's parents, I was interested to read Patrick Cockburn's own record of his childhood illness and of the state of the Irish Health Service at the time of the polio epidemic. Cockburn's prodigious memory and journalist's training have stood him well in his engaging and thoroughly substantiated account of this mid-twentieth-century scourge.
The writer's pieces on the Iraq war and beyond were exemplary. This is a brilliant combination of personal memoir, family history and journalistic investigation. Even more relevant since the covid pandemic.