Global Health Policy

 

Beach reading: “Saving the World”

July 31, 2006


It’s not often that you come across novels about global immunization, but Julia Alvarez appears to have written one, aptly titled Saving the World:

Two women living two centuries apart each face “a crisis of the soul” when their fates are tied to idealistic men whose commitments to medical humanitarian missions end in disillusionment. Alma Heubner’s husband, Richard, goes to the Dominican Republic to help eradicate AIDS, while Alma, a bestselling Latina writer, stays at home in Vermont to work on a story about a real, ill-fated 19th-century expedition chaperoned by Dona Isabel Sendales y Gomez, the spinster director of a Spanish orphanage who agrees to vaccinate 20 of her charges with cowpox and bring them from Spain to Central America to prevent future smallpox epidemics.

  AddThis Social Bookmark Button

You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.


Post a Comment

We value frank and constructive exchanges and encourage you to use your real name in your comments.

  • Global Health Policy is a group blog discussing the issues facing the donor community on everything from HIV/AIDS financing to pharmaceutical R&D to broader health systems concerns. Comments are strongly encouraged, and suggestions for new posts can be sent to us here.

    The Race Against Drug Resistance
    A short film tells the story of Khalifa, a nurse in Ghana who contracted typhoid. She takes one drug and then another—each more expensive than the last—but still she isn’t well. The film uses expert interviews and animation to explain why drug resistance threatens us all—and what we can do about it.

    Learn more about our Combating Drug Resistance initiative.

  • Translator

  • Monthly Archives

  • Categories

  • Most Recent Comments

  • Blogs & Other Useful Resources