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Sacrament

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From National Book Award finalist Susan Straight, a captivating new novel about a group of nurses fighting through the first year of a pandemic and the beloved California community they will risk their lives to protect
In August 2020, a group of nurses are working in the ICU at a hospital in San Bernardino at the height of a Covid Larette Embers, whose husband, Grief, is an animal control officer; Cherrise Martinez, whose husband died years ago in a car crash, and whose daughter Raquel has been sent to a Coachella date farm to live with her great-aunt to avoid the virus; and Marisol Manalang, born in the Philippines but based in Sacramento. To safeguard their families, the nurses are living in a makeshift RV camp close to the hospital; they share food and cigarettes yet keep their work private. For this is a country in crisis, and they are assisting strangers at the edge of death with infinite tenderness and growing desperation.

As the nurses struggle with the skyrocketing number of sick patients, Cherisse's daughter goes missing. Grief's friend Johnny Frias, a California Highway Patrol officer, joins the search to find her, and the resulting journey leads to new love and loss, pushing all our characters to their breaking points. Brilliantly highlighting both the quiet heroism and extraordinary bravery of first responders, Sacrament once again proves that Susan Straight is the "essential voice in American writing and in writing of the West" (The New York Times).

Audible Audio

Published October 28, 2025

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About the author

Susan Straight

45 books422 followers

Susan Straight's newest novel is "Between Heaven and Here." It is the last in the Rio Seco Trilogy, which began with "A Million Nightingales" and "Take One Candle Light a Room." She has published eight novels, a novel for young readers and a children's book. She has also written essays and articles for numerous national publications, including The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, The Nation and Harper's Magazine, and is a frequent contributor to NPR and Salon.com.

Her story "Mines," first published in Zoetrope All Story, was included in Best American Short Stories 2003. She won a Lannan Literary Award in 2007. She won a 2008 Edgar Allan Poe Award for her short story "The Golden Gopher."

She is a Professor at the University of California, Riverside and lives in Riverside, California.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 60 reviews
Profile Image for Thomas.
1,873 reviews12.1k followers
November 23, 2025
I liked that this book highlighted the experiences of nurses and first responders during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. Susan Straight does a great job of harkening back to a devastating and bewildering time and showing these characters’ fortitude even in difficult circumstances. Unfortunately I give this book only three stars because the writing style was quite slow for me; the prose just felt too uniform and one-dimensional, even across scenes of different emotional intensity. Even though there were multiple main characters their voices all blended together too much for my liking. Respect to Straight for the message of this novel even if the execution didn’t work for me.
Profile Image for Michael --  Justice for Renee.
289 reviews250 followers
January 12, 2026
Our Angels Who Suffered

Publishers have been avoiding the trauma of the pandemic, sensing that the pain is still too raw for readers– a reluctance reminiscent of the post-Vietnam era. However, Susan Straight's powerful novel, “Sacrament” unflinchingly examines the invisible toll the pandemic inflicted on essential workers and their families.

While many of us were fortunate enough to remain secluded and avoid public spaces, confronting the challenges of isolation, our "essential workers" faced a starkly different reality. Author Susan Straight, who lived near a hospital—a major site of suffering during that period—spoke often with nurses who relayed the constant, unrelenting misery of every shift. These individuals stood as the heroes on the front line of this war.

Straight's powerful work, "Sacrament," focuses on the lives of three ICU nurses—Larette Embers, Cherrise Martinez, and Marisol Manalang—during the COVID-19 pandemic. To shield their families from the virus, these nurses lived in close quarters, enduring stifling conditions in trailers near the hospital. This necessary separation meant they were isolated from their loved ones and also prevented them from sharing the daily, agonizing realities they faced: witnessing patients, friends, and neighbors die alone. A particularly moving element of the story involves Larette singing to comatose patients. These were songs requested by the patients' loved ones, offering a final, remote connection—a form of sacrament in place of last rites—at a time when the pandemic's end seemed impossibly far off.

A major plotline is the disappearance of Cherrise’s 15-year-old daughter, Raquel. After running away from the Coachella date farm where she was staying, her absence requires a search involving California Highway Patrol officer Johnny Frias, a character who also appeared in Straight's previous novel, "Mecca." Raquel is desperate because she has been unable to reach her mother and, in defiance of her mother's explicit prohibition against contacting her, fears that her mother might be succumbing to COVID-19. Her desperate search is a mirror of the nurses' isolation—it highlights how the pandemic fractured essential human connections.

Susan Straight's novel, "Mecca," was my favorite book of 2022. With “Sacrament” she continues her powerful exploration of overlooked communities and the lives of those who inhabit Southern California, a hallmark praised by the Los Angeles Times when it proclaimed her 'the bard of overlooked California'.

“Sacrament” is an emotionally profound and critically acclaimed work that provides an unflinching look at a harrowing historical period. It grounds the immense tragedy of the pandemic in the immediate, visceral details of the nurses' restricted lives, women who were denied the option of isolation. By transforming the clinical isolation unit into a space that is both sacred and agonizing, The collective trauma of the pandemic finds a devastating, personal voice in the lives of Larette, Cherrise, and Marisol. It is a terrifying, beautiful novel that insists we not look away. Straight performs a kind of final ritual for this terrifying moment. This book solidifies her standing as one of our most vital chroniclers of contemporary American life.

Thank you to Catapult, Counterpoint Press, and Soft Skull Press and also to Edelweiss Plus for providing an advance reader copy in exchange for an honest review. #Sacrament #EdelweissPlus
Profile Image for Novel Visits.
1,113 reviews326 followers
November 7, 2025
@counterpointpress | #gifted Do you ever have expectations for a book that get in the way of your enjoyment? That’s what happened to me initially with 𝗦𝗔𝗖𝗥𝗔𝗠𝗘𝗡𝗧𝗦 by Susan Straight, but I’m happy to say I overcame those early doubts. The blurb for this book describes it as being about a group of nurses in San Bernardino, CA during that first summer of COVID. To keep their families safe, they live in small trailers not far from the hospital where they work long brutal shifts. That was all a big part of this story, but there was so much more and at first all the rest threw me. In fact, I almost stopped reading. That would have been a mistake. ⁣

𝘚𝘢𝘤𝘳𝘢𝘮𝘦𝘯𝘵𝘴 turned out to be such a rich story exactly because it was more than just about the nurses. It was also about their families, their children, their friends, their community, their patients, and yes, the nurses themselves. At the heart of the story were cousins Larette and Cherrise who’d grown up together and ended up in the same career, nursing.That brought them both to the front lines in the unknown territory that was trying to save lives in that horrifying first year of the pandemic. Their jobs were not the only COVID related issues that were part of this story. That’s where the friends and family came in.⁣

This book was a little like stepping back in time to an era we all remember, but sometimes wish we didn’t. I realize that for some readers, the book will be a hard no, but I’d encourage you to consider it with an open mind. Like other collective tragedies (WWII, Vietnam, 9/11), that time is a piece of our shared history. Yes, parts were difficult to read, but it was the overall humanity that shone through. That’s why, in the end, I really liked this one. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⁣
Profile Image for Maureen Grigsby.
1,228 reviews
November 8, 2025
This novel was different than I expected, but it tells the story of several Covid 19 nurses and the impact of caring for patients on their families, the patients, and themselves.
Profile Image for Jan.
1,329 reviews29 followers
November 17, 2025
The pacing was a bit uneven, but I love Straight’s world of working class characters navigating the first years in of the Covid 19 pandemic in the inland regions of Southern California.
Profile Image for Melony .
42 reviews3 followers
October 29, 2025
Highly recommend.
Great book about families, the ones we have & the ones we make.
Profile Image for Salty Swift.
1,066 reviews29 followers
November 5, 2025
Tale of nurses looking after Covid patients in a small California town, as seen through their eyes and those close to them. There are passages here that hit so close to home, that bring back such dire memories of that phase that one wants to look away. There is absolutely no doubt, the nurses that stayed and soothed the sickest patients and saw them through their passing were the real heroes.
89 reviews
November 3, 2025
Wow

What a beautiful story. So many layers. So much love. This is a book that is going to stay with you for days because there's so much in it for you to unpack and think about.

Nursing family is unlike any other family because you deal with life and death all the time. So many people on the precipice of falling And never coming back or turning over and living a whole new life again.
Profile Image for Jan Pitts.
728 reviews3 followers
November 16, 2025
This author is new to me and I thought the subject would appeal as I am a nurse. I simply don’t like her writing and had difficulty with the flow. Not for me.
Profile Image for Booknblues.
1,536 reviews8 followers
January 1, 2026
book:Sacrament|224082456] by Susan Straight tells the story of nurses living on the front line fighting Covid in 2020. Because of its subject matter it may be too painful for some to revisit. I know there were moments in this book that I had difficulty with.

The nurses live in small trailers provided for them to live in away from their families. We see how they and their families cope. Straight tells a gripping story of the families during this fraught time.

Larrette and Cherrise are cousins who have been through everything together but they never imagined they would be nurses fighting in the frontlines against Covid nor what this would ask of their families.

The story tole in third person shifts perspective between characters but with Johnny Frias a CHP officer it is told in first person. Apparently Johnny was the main character in Mecca (which I have not read.)

I found the book moving and would recommend it to any who can get past reliving 2020. I might also recommend reading Mecca first, although I haven't read it but want to now.

I would and want to read more by Susan Straight as this is the first one I've read.
Profile Image for Cindy.
1,735 reviews37 followers
November 4, 2025
A COVID novel about hard-working nurses during lockdown, staying in a temporary trailer park to keep their families safe. The novel focuses on how they cope with the distancing, the deaths, and the despair of not knowing when it would end. One major storyline concerns a single mother and her high-school-aged daughter, now separated by a 2-hour drive and lockdown protocols, only able to Zoom when the mother's work breaks align. Another nurse sings to the departing whose loved ones are unable to be at the bedside. It's heartbreaking yet also hopeful. There's a lot going on - perhaps too much - but I was left with an even deeper respect for the essential workers who kept things going and for the sacrifices they made.
My thanks to the author, publisher, @RecordedBooks, and #NetGalley for access to the well-narrated audiobook of #Sacrament for review purposes. It is now available.

925 reviews21 followers
December 9, 2025
As much as I enjoyed Mecca, this sequel/continuation did not resonate with me. The COVID scenes at the hospital were very touching, the farming scenes felt realistic but the book itself felt overly dramatic in parts and boring in others. It was very uneven and I was glad to be done with it.
265 reviews
December 3, 2025
Hoping there will be a sequel to this book. I loved it. Hard to explain why. I took two years of Spanish in high school, and can usually understand what is written, but I kept grabbing my iPad and using the translation app!
Profile Image for Liz Willard.
854 reviews
December 10, 2025
Will it ever get easier to read a book about Covid? This is an important one, giving insight into the lives of nurses. Not an easy read. It’s written a bit poetically, which can be both beautiful but also vague. The focus on relationships is key.
Profile Image for Sheila The Reader.
421 reviews21 followers
October 31, 2025
Set during the height of the 2020 pandemic in San Bernardino, Sacrament follows three ICU nurses whose lives intertwine as they balance compassion, exhaustion, and fear while caring for the dying. When one nurse’s daughter disappears, their world collides with a highway patrol officer’s search that exposes both love and loss amid a nation in crisis.

I listened to this one on audiobook thanks to an advanced copy from the publisher and NetGalley, and the narrators did an excellent job bringing the nurses and their distinct personalities to life. The story had moments that resonated, but I found that much of the focus was on small daily details rather than deeper character development, which made it harder to form a strong emotional connection to the people in it. The subject matter itself was heavy, revisiting a time that still feels raw for many of us, and that made parts of it difficult to read. The writing is skillful and clear, and I can see the author’s talent in how she captures place and tone, but this particular story didn’t completely land for me. I’d still be open to reading more of her work in the future.

Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for the advanced copy of this audiobook in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for thewanderingjew.
1,764 reviews18 followers
November 21, 2025
Sacrament: A Novel, Susan Straight, author; Stacy Gonzalez, Marisol Ramirez, Shaun Taylor-Corbett, Jasmin Walker, narrators.
Nurses Larette and Charisse may be important characters in this novel, but it is their shared experience with family, patients, and others from diverse backgrounds, that were, and are possibly still today impacted by the Covid virus, that illuminates Covid’s ongoing effect on all of us. The interaction with Rachel, Charisse’s daughter and Grief, Larette’s husband, serves to add authenticity to this story as the ravages of the Covid pandemic on society continues even now. It is through these characters that we witness and remember Covid’s effect on all of our daily lives, as it forced necessary changes and challenges that everyone had to face.
Covid created anxiety. It emphasized the need to have a strong sense of devotion and loyalty to each other, in order to deal with the hoarding and scarcities of products to come, and the inevitable loss of loved ones. We would all have to face loss and grief. In the beginning, there was simply little that could be done to fight the disease. The” trial and error” approach, often resulted in errors. So, this is a heartfelt and often heartbreaking tale, but those of us still standing are filled with the hope of building a better future for all of us.
The author has exposed the details and the ramifications of the inadequate, often “fly by night” rules, and/or lack of them, developed in the earliest stages of the pandemic. Unfortunately, we were largely ignorant of the disease, and our understanding of how to treat Covid only slowly evolved. Kudos to the author for enlightening the reader, with such clarity, to the sacrifices made by the dedicated workers in the medical profession and also in the other essential service fields. These workers had to overcome their own fears as they faced their daily, traumatic experiences while they feared for their own safety and the safety of their families.
At a time of such a disastrous event like a pandemic, that threatened the continuation of our very existence on earth, the loyalty and courage of essential workers was often either ignored or unappreciated. Their job performance was often thankless. Their inability to save many victims was often cause for abusive criticism. The unreality that we all faced, of possible extinction, as we faced a danger that seemed beyond our control, created chaos in some circles of society; yet our dedicated professionals never seemed to give up hope or weaken and run from their responsibility to help those less fortunate, even when their own safety was threatened.
The author steered clear, for the most part, of politics, and instead concentrated on humanity and its ability to treat each other humanely. Responding to extreme measures, health care workers chose to remain and comfort the victims, helping the dying as they shuffled off this mortal coil without the benefit of their loved ones surrounding them. The morality of some of the choices made, by political entities and some in position of authority, was left out in this book. It was deemed to be a story for another day of judgment. For this book, we can only judge the devoted professionals and agree that they were angels of mercy. Although, some found this book slow in the beginning. I did not agree with that assessment. I was glad that my fear that it would become political was unfounded. It is a wonderful book and I highly recommend it.
Profile Image for Carrie.
1,426 reviews
January 10, 2026
Revisiting the pandemic while down with the flu was not the best circumstance for reading this book, but its light and outlook were soothing. It is August of 2020 and hospitals are still overloaded - at Our Lady in San Bernadino, CA the gift shop and chapel have been converted to bed space. The dedicated nurses working the ICU have moved into small RV trailers so they can stay on site and not have to worry about bringing the virus home. It also means they don't get to go home. There are about 5 that the story centers on, and two even more specifically who are cousins. Larette Embers is missing her husband and teenage son and Cherrise Martinez, who lost her husband in an accident years ago has just her teenage daughter Raquel whom she has sent to live with inlaws on a date farm near Coachella. Raquel is bereft, missing her mom and friends and in-person school. Both nurses get the virus at some point, so when Raquel doesn't hear from her mom, she makes the impulsive plan to hitch a ride with a local boy to come home and be with her. She goes missing for 2 days, adding to Cherrise's agonized worry and forcing her and Larette to reconsider priorities around family and work. There are lots of patient stories too - the medical professionals feel they are fighting an unacknowledged war and honestly, there must still be lingering trauma in the medical community for the complete overwhelm of death. Not having directly lived that aspect of it, I had forgotten the isolation and separation of families, the inability to visit the dying, families camping out in the hospital parking lot to be close, the Facetime and phone calls that nurses took on to connect people one last time. Larette, who has acting and singing experience has staarted singing a favorite song to the patients at death's door. The level of care and devotion in this book is the sacrament - honoring the life of a stranger at the expense of your own. The titular poem by Paulann Peterson also figures in. These are stories that need to be told, lest we forget.
11.4k reviews194 followers
October 27, 2025
An amazing read. Set in Southern California during the height of COVID it's very much about family, the one we are born into and the one we make. And it's very wise. Cousins Larette and Cherrisse are working in the ICU and living in trailers three blocks from the hospital to keep their families safe. Larette's husband Grief is an animal control officer while Cherrisse is a widow who has sent her 15 year old daughter Raquel to live at her in-laws date farm to keep her safe. Then there's Johnny, Grief's friend who is a CHP officer and kinda cowboy. This winds between all of them over a period of weeks. Weeks when Raquel pines for her mother and ultimately goes missing for the family when she persuades Joey, who works at the farm to drive her back to see her mother. There are admittedly some terrible moments in the ICU but there are also moments of grace, especially when Larette sings to patients. The atmospherics are equally vivid at the date farm and at the ranch where Grief and Johnny wrestle an escaped bull back to a pen. I worry that this won't get the attention it deserves due to the topic but it's emotional, thoughtful, beautifully written and just terrific. Thanks to Edelweiss for the ARC. This is the first time I've read Straight and I'm going to look for her again. Highly recommend.
Profile Image for Deborah.
1,616 reviews82 followers
November 11, 2025
I have read every novel Susan Straight has written since her first was published in 1993, and they have all been exceptional, in my opinion. This newest one is another stunner, with a gripping, emotional story, utterly human and credible characters, and a vivid sense of place. (It puzzles me that she’s not better known and more widely read, but the taste of the reading public often baffles the heck out of me.) Some of the characters from her previous novel, Mecca, appear here (though there’s no need to have read that one to fully appreciate this), and we’re back in central California, in the area around San Bernardino. But this is summer 2020, which means Covid has shut everything down, and the story centres on two nurses, cousins, who are caring for the (far too often) dying people in the ICU and living in trailers near the hospital to prevent spreading the virus to their families. This has been going on for months by the time the story opens, and the nurses and their family members are starting to come apart at the seams. The story goes in really interesting directions, both inside the hospital and out, with big emotion and empathy. The author clearly cares for her characters, and I really did too. Highly recommended.
Profile Image for Kate Belt.
1,342 reviews6 followers
November 24, 2025
Possibly my best novel of 2025 (not counting rereads)! What a beautifully written and beautifully told story. It’s about Covid and is also a history lesson, with a strong sense of place, about the everyday lives of ranchers and farmers who have populated the San Bernardino, CA area for hundreds of years. This redemption story will break your heart! I can’t write a better description than this excerpt from the Washington Post Book Review “Sacrament is a rare novel that deepens the human drama of Covid . . . In populating Sacrament with a cast of Black, Mexican American, Indigenous and Filipina essential workers during the pre-vaccine days of Covid, Straight transcends the mundanity of Covid novels that have concerned themselves with upper-class social distancers . . . Straight’s reverence for the work of nurses is clear . . . writing directly from their perspectives, she avoids the saccharine tone of some appreciations . . . Sacrament is a deeply humane novel about the tenderness and heartache of caring for strangers, the misguided ways we try to protect the people we love the most by hiding our hardest truths, and the strength that can be found in community." I first learned about this book and this author in Library Journal’s Prepub Alert.
Profile Image for Kendra Chura.
97 reviews
November 6, 2025
This story was both a reminder and an eye-opener of what people went through during peak COVID.

Based on the description, it wasn’t exactly what I expected, but I still enjoyed it. The story follows not only the nurses but several other characters as well.

Each character in the audiobook had a different narrator, and I thought they were all great. There’s a bit of singing in this, and while she had a lovely voice, I really don’t enjoy singing in audiobooks.

What I didn’t love was how often it felt like hardships were being compared. Being an essential worker during the height of COVID would be hard no matter what. Obviously, the ER nurses were front and center, and it was clearly mentally and physically exhausting. But a few times it felt like they were arguing they had it worse—when no one was saying they didn’t—just that it was a hard time for everyone.

Overall, it was a good story. It was a bit slow at times, but it did keep my attention and the different narrators made it easy to follow each character.

Thanks to NetGalley and RB Media for the advanced listening copy.
Profile Image for Allison.
58 reviews4 followers
November 16, 2025
Set in 2020 when Covid was a new virus that was easily spread, making so many very ill, often taking lives and leaving others with long term symptoms. The nurses of San Bernadino Hospital must isolate themselves when not at work to avoid spreading the virus any further. The devastation of their pasts and all that they witness at work along with being isolated from their families, takes its toll of course. Much of the book explores the bonds that pull people together in the wake of tragedy. The characters move through grief, guilt and moments of grace that feel grounded and real.

There are four narrators of this audiobook. The narration is great although at some stages the pace seems very slow. The singing lines are lovely.
I found it a little difficult to follow in parts due to the shifts between timelines and perspectives. Despite the changing narrators, I think it may have been easier for me if I had read Sacrament in print.

Thank you to Netgalley and RB Media for the free audiobook in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Jt O'Neill.
606 reviews81 followers
January 7, 2026
I picked this one up on the Lucky Day shelf at the library. Despite the fact that there were some compelling moments, overall the book didn't grab me.

What worked:
The story takes place in the thick of COVID. If you have forgotten what that all felt like, this is a good reminder. The nurses highlighted in the book show the dedication of medical staff, especially in that first year. Also, the way the world took seriously the need to isolate and maintain six feet distance was evident throughout the book.

The story takes place a little east of Los Angeles. The text and imagery reflect that part of the country.

What might have worked better:

The flow of the novel was interrupted often. I couldn't get a handle on some of the characters. The interruptions also caused confusion about how different characters were related to each other.

The pacing was also off for me. I wanted things to move faster. I kept wondering when I would ever finish this book.

The book didn't work so well for me but others loved it. Give it a try.

Profile Image for Readnponder.
795 reviews43 followers
November 17, 2025
“Sacrament” is first of author Susan Straight’s books that I’ve read. I will definitely try some more of her work. I was drawn to the novel because it featured nurses during the Covid pandemic. I have a relative who was one of those nurses holding a tablet or phone in front of a dying patient so the family could say good-bye. I read to understand more of her experience, and this book delivered.

However it delivered even more. I’m on the east coast and unfamiliar with southern California. This book portrayed Latinos and native Americans, agriculture, and the extreme weather conditions through the lives of first responders and their families. I also appreciated insight into teenagers, separated from their parents for safety reasons, while trying to finish high school online.

I listened to the audio version. I love an audiobook with multiple narrators. However, some of the narrators read a bit too slow for my taste. The accents and Spanish phrases enhanced this multicultural book.
944 reviews4 followers
October 31, 2025
Many thanks to NetGalley and RB Media for the free audiobook in exchange for my honest review. Stacy Gonzalez, Shaun Taylor-Corbett, Jasmin Walker, Kim Ramirez, all narrated the book and did a fantastic job of making the book come to life!

This is the story of several ICU nurses during the summer of 2020 at the height of Covid. These women chose to live in trailers 3 blocks from the hospital to keep their families safe but the separation from family had its effect.

This is a well written story about relationships and family, the ones we are born into and the one we make. The sacrifice these women make to help the dying is heartbreaking. It not only took its toll on the women but their loved ones that they sought to protect.

A gut wrenching read that is a tribute to the healthcare workers of Covid.
Profile Image for Macy.
1,941 reviews
November 30, 2025
A story about the experiences of a group of nurses during the COVID pandemic. What they went through, the amazing work they did, the things they endured, the emotional toll on them and their families and their hearts. It’s an important fictionalized version of what I imagine many nurses and front line workers endured. I know some in the medical profession who lived away from their families and home early on so as to keep them safe. The fear, the impact on the children stays with them. Not the easiest of reads, but a story that needed to be written. The pacing was a bit uneven and I didn’t love the narration, but overall, an important description of what these amazing people experienced. Upped to 4 stars from what would have been a 3.5 if half stars were available.

I received a copy of this book from Netgalley.com in exchange for a fair and honest review.
Profile Image for Vicki.
40 reviews3 followers
December 16, 2025
Sacrament
By Susan Straight

This was a moving exploration of the lives of a group of San Bernardino, CA nurses living in trailers on the site of a hospital during a COVID surge. The details of their care and concern for both patients and families brought back all the emotions of watching the horrors of 2020.

We see their actions, feel their pain and fear. Straight shows us the power of secrets we keep to protect those we love, with good intentions and mixed outcomes.

Her characters are working people, many with family histories connecting them to Mexico, sprinkling Spanish expressions, foods, traditions throughout, creating a beautiful cultural mosaic; I came away wanting to learn more about the history of the settlement of California. And dates. Definitely need to learn more about all those different types of dates.
Profile Image for Missy.
53 reviews
December 28, 2025
I loved this book and this author. Even though this is a stand alone novel, I think you should read Susan Straight’s “Mecca” first. It’s a great introduction to the characters back history. It also sets the scene for this beautiful California inland empire that few authors write about. I can feel the hot Santa Anas. This book takes us back to the time of Covid and centers wonderful nurses (and their families) who were on the front lines of this epidemic. Their tenderness and sacrifice is awe inspiring. But it’s not a “Covid” novel. It’s about the beauty of family and friends and the bonds we make with each other. It touched my heart. I hope to read about these characters in another of her books. I miss them already.
68 reviews1 follower
January 5, 2026
Sometimes I don't want to put down a really good story and wish I could read straight from beginning to end. But this book was different - I wanted to savor every chapter and I definitely did not want it to end. I actually stopped reading a few pages from the end so I could look forward to a few more pages the next day.

The novel takes us back to the heart of the Pandemic, both in terms of when the story takes place - the summer of 2020 - and the heart of the tragic time by describing the lives of four nurses who faithfully cared for the sick and dieing patients. The families of the nurses and the families waiting for their ailing loved ones are at the center of this compelling and beautiful story.

An amazing way to start the year. This one will be a hard one to top for me.
491 reviews2 followers
December 18, 2025
Thank you Netgalley for this audio book.

Four ICU nurses are living in a trailer park near the hospital where they work in order to protect their families from COVID 19. Although they come from different backgrounds they have become very close knit and share almost everything, including their hopes, dreams and what life has become and what it may look like after the pandemic has run its course.

I feel this story would have been a better book to read rather than listen to. There were way too many characters and there didn’t seem to be much continuity. Also the actual singing, while making sense in the story did not add anything to the audio.
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