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Flood Stage -- A Novel by Kate Scannell -- July, 2010Torrential rains pour into Thalburg Canyon, California. A catastrophic flood overtakes its community and the interconnected stories of the canyon residents are acted out on center stage. A paralyzed woman, exhausted by her life, plans an opportune death in the flood. A young boy is transformed after his mother salvages his amputated finger. Couples drift together and apart over old affairs and insurance coverage mistakes. A man burdened by a toxic secret struggles for atonement as the flood encroaches upon his final opportunity for redemption. Together, these and other stories portray a series of unique personal histories caught up in a universal human drama. Review -- By Midwest Book Review When a flood is approaching, many see it as a warning to move to safety. These people have other plans. "Flood Stage" tells the story of an assortment of individuals who are all struggling with their own lives as a torrential downpour soaks their Thalburg Canyon homes into a flood zone. Some seek their end to end their pain, others look for a chance at redemption, and others still have their own stories of life and death. Touching and poignant, "Flood Stage" is a fine novel that shouldn't be missed. Review -- By Norma Scannell, the author's Mom I loved it. It's my favorite book in the entire world and for all time to come. Review -- By M. Lance Reynolds Kate Scannell brings to life the diverse characters in Flood Stage in a way that allowed me to inhabit their hearts and minds. As a white male elder it may seem obvious that I can clearly relate to the tormented Bill Dunleavy for past misdeeds. It is much less apparent that I can understand and feel what it might be like to spend an adult lifetime wheel chair bound, as does Bill's childhood sweetheart Maddy Bertolli. Now I can. The setting is a small and remote northern California town under evacuation from a flood that will destroy its houses, farms and businesses. In twenty interconnected stories Kate takes us in clear and economical prose through the triumphs and disappointments, the loves and the heartbreaks, of the inhabitants' lives. She unpeels the misunderstandings that put relationships and marriages in peril, whether from the viewpoint of an adolescent youth or an Indian dentist. I began to understand what it might be like to be an African American woman in a largely white town enduring well-meaning but obtuse comments and questions. I read the book in two evenings and now come back to it to savor its many insights. Buy it and read it. It has enriched my life and I believe it will enrich yours. |
Selected WorksFiction -- "Flood Stage," a novel of interconnected stories by Kate Scannell (2010)
Torrential rains pour into Thalburg Canyon, California. Flooding ensues, and a universal human drama unfolds as the interconnected stories of the canyon residents are acted out on center stage.
Memoir, by Kate Scannell (1999)
The author begins her medical career as a young physician caring for people who are dying with AIDS during the 1980s.
Book Editing (2011)
A Soldier's Story—World War II and the Battle at Sessenheim, France, offers a gripping personal account of one soldier's combat experiences on the bloody battlefields of France and Germany during the months preceding the Allies' 1945 victory in Europe.
Book Reviews -- Examples
Journalist Rebecca Skloot’s new book is a gripping read that embodies all abstractions about research ethics in a compelling tale about Henrietta Lacks – a woman whose microscopic cancerous cells shook the world’s medical establishment in 1951.
Newspaper Columns
Since 2000 -- Syndicated medical opinion columns about the sociopolitical and ethical dimensions of American health care.
Medical Essays
Essays about medical practice, physician writing, and bioethics.
Nonfiction, documentary, executive producer
DVD -- Journey by Heart -- an engaging and intimate view of Alzheimer's Services of the East Bay. |