Nest Book Club
Dear Community,

Our tech team has launched updates to The Nest today. As a result of these updates, members of the Nest Community will need to change their password in order to continue participating in the community. In addition, The Nest community member's avatars will be replaced with generic default avatars. If you wish to revert to your original avatar, you will need to re-upload it via The Nest.

If you have questions about this, please email help@theknot.com.

Thank you.

Note: This only affects The Nest's community members and will not affect members on The Bump or The Knot.

WIJFR: Five Days at Memorial (possible spoilers, I guess?)

I never know what to say about spoilers in non-fiction . . .

I can't say I really enjoyed this book, but I couldn't put it down.  This was about the events that took place at Memorial Medical Center in New Orleans during and in the days immediately following Hurricane Katrina, and then continued with the law enforcement investigation that followed over the next couple of years.  Overall, I'm glad I read it, and I would recommend it if you are interested in learning about the subject, but I think it had some flaws.  The writing was kind of exhausting, for one thing - like she was trying too hard to make a tragic story sound artsy or something - at one point I was showing lines to my DH and asking him how this book could've possibly won a Pulitzer with crap like this.

I really liked the first part, the story of the actual "five days" referenced in the title.  It was fascinating and appalling all at the same time.  The level of unpreparedness and disorganization was horrifying.  The people in charge were not competent to be in the roles they were in, and the pre-disaster planning (or lack thereof) was laughable.  Officials at all levels, from the hospital all the way up through FEMA failed to do their jobs in the years before the storm, and those failures seemed to lead to tragedy on top of tragedy on top of tragedy.  What an awful, preventable situation.  Sadly, it seems like while lessons have been learned in the intervening 9 years, a similar situation was only narrowly avoided in an NYC hospital during Hurricane Sandy.  Luckily, the folks in charge there were better prepared and had better tools and assistance at their disposal.  Emergency response and preparedness is a fascinating field to me, though.

The second part, the law enforcement investigations, is where the book lost it for me.  It was SO biased, and twisted so many things a certain way, and presented so many people and facts in a certain light . . .  I agree with the author that everything became really politically motivated, and inappropriately so, but the book's attitude toward certain doctors and nurses and some of the attorneys and government officials seemed inappropriate to me.  Do I think that those doctors and nurses did something wrong in the face of situation they were in?  Absolutely.  I think what they did was unconscionable, and I don't know how they can sleep at night, but I didn't like the way that the story was told here.  There were so many levels of tragedy here, it's unbelievable, but still, the book felt really sensationalized, like reading Fox News.  But again, the story itself is really interesting, so I'm still glad to have read the book, if that makes sense.

Re: WIJFR: Five Days at Memorial (possible spoilers, I guess?)

  • I just read this too and I agree with you. It actually took me longer to read the first part of the book because I found it more emotionally exhasting - the investigations were easier for me because I wasn't as comfortable with how things were presented so I could distance myself more.

    I really thought I was going to have to ditch the book when they started talking about the NICU babies. I was so glad that they got them out earlier on in the ordeal and they all survived - because, ugh, I don't think I could have handled if that hadn't worked out.

     

  • SusieBWSusieBW member
    Tenth Anniversary 5000 Comments 500 Love Its Name Dropper
    Kate&Mark said:

    I really thought I was going to have to ditch the book when they started talking about the NICU babies. I was so glad that they got them out earlier on in the ordeal and they all survived - because, ugh, I don't think I could have handled if that hadn't worked out.

    ITA about the babies.
    I gave this 3 stars because I am glad I read it and it was really fascinating, but what interested me was the actual story, and I didn't care for the way it was told.
  • When the book really started turning against Dr. Pou, I googled to see the outcome and ran across a list of memoirs from staff members at the hospital. I'm interested to see how those compare to this account.
  • kpowkpow member
    Seventh Anniversary 5000 Comments 100 Love Its Name Dropper
    This was one of those books that lead me straight to Google to find out more info.

    I'm reading The Good Nurse which is about a nurse who killed possibly hundreds of patients. It is kind of incredible what hospitals do to protect themselves from lawsuits which seemed to fit in with Five Days at Memorial.
    Can I marry them all?

    image

  • kpow said:

    This was one of those books that lead me straight to Google to find out more info.

    I'm reading The Good Nurse which is about a nurse who killed possibly hundreds of patients. It is kind of incredible what hospitals do to protect themselves from lawsuits which seemed to fit in with Five Days at Memorial.

    They caught the serial killer nurse at the hospital I have birth at! Although, I just had my daughter last year and he was caught years ago. I think I might have to read that book! 5 Days sounds really good too though (at least the first half...and going in knowing the NICU babies are okay). Nonfiction books like these always intrigue and terrify me!
    Kristen's book recommendations, liked quotes, book clubs, book trivia, book lists (read shelf)

    image

    Baby Birthday Ticker Ticker
Sign In or Register to comment.
Choose Another Board
Search Boards