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Review: Touching Distance

July 17, 2008 23:00

By

Madeleine Kingsley,

Madeleine Kingsley

1 min read

By Rebecca Abrams
Macmillan, £12.99

The author of When Parents Die blends history and fiction in the story of a doctor battling 18th-century medical mores


That naches follows new birth is our 21st-century norm. Not so in 1790 Aberdeen, where delivery led to a shattering succession of maternal deaths.

Rebecca Abrams’s first novel puts fictionalised flesh on the real-life records of that puerperal fever epidemic and its unsung physician hero Alec Gordon who, way ahead of his time, fathomed its cause and likely cure.

https://api.thejc.atexcloud.io/image-service/alias/contentid/173preqa4c11eacpxv8/Rebecca_Abrams.jpg%3Ff%3Ddefault%26%24p%24f%3Dcae0be8?f=3x2&w=732&q=0.6Abrams is best known for her book and broadsheet reflections on contemporary childhood issues: children whose parents die, children caught up in war, and the unacknowledged tribulations of second pregnancies. But Abrams’s mother survived puerperal fever as late as 1959, and she herself experienced the close collision of birth and death during a tricky labour. 

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