โ€˜Sacramentโ€™ review: Susan Straight pays tribute to COVID nurses

โ€˜Sacramentโ€™ review: Susan Straight pays tribute to COVID nurses


Book Review

Sacrament

By Susan Straight
Counterpoint: 352 pages, $29

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Throughout the spring and summer of 2020, across the U.S. and the world, millions of quarantined citizens appeared nightly at their windows and balconies, offering thanks to the healthcare workers whose lives were dedicated to saving theirs. In my little corner of Silver Lake, 7 p.m. commenced a daily cacophonous communal concert of pots and pans banging, trombones and trumpets blaring, dogs and coyotes howling: a grateful group roar. I was 67 with a history of respiratory illness: extra high risk. My younger neighbors, knowing this, grocery-shopped for me, sweetening my mornings with fresh milk and fruit during those long, grim days.

โ€œSacramentโ€ is Susan Straightโ€™s homage to a small fictional band of ICU nurses battling the 2020 COVID-19 surge at a San Bernardino hospital. Her 10th novel follows the beat sheโ€™s been covering, and living, since her first. โ€œAquaboogie,โ€ her 1990 debut, was set in Rio Seco, a fictional stand-in for Riverside, where Straight grew up and still lives. The first in her bloodline to graduate high school, Straight earned an MFA at the University of Massachusetts and brought it home to UC Riverside, where sheโ€™s been teaching creative writing since 1988. Her twin passions for her homeland and lyrical artistry bloom on every page. โ€œAll summer, there had been fewer cars on the road in Southern California, and everyone remarked on how with no smog, the sunsets werenโ€™t deep, heated crimson. Just quiet slipping into darkness.โ€

Susan Straight stands in front of her house amid poppies.

As Susan Straightโ€™s work invariably does, โ€œSacramentโ€ challenges the prevailing notion that the overlooked Californians she centers in her work and in her life are less worthy, less interesting, less human than their wealthier, whiter, more visible urban counterparts.

(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times)

The Los Angeles Times dubbed Straight the โ€œbard of overlooked California,โ€ and โ€œSacramentโ€ proves the praise. Straightโ€™s African American ex-husband and three daughters; her Latino, Filipino, white, Native and mixed-race neighbors; and her immersion in overlooked California bring new meaning to the advice โ€œwrite what you know.โ€ Straightโ€™s personal and literary missions extend to who she knows.

In โ€œSacrament,โ€ Straight turns her singular focus to a handful of nurses camping in a wagon train of funky, sweltering trailers near the hospital they call Our Lady. Separated from their spouses and kids โ€” โ€œSix feet apart or six feet under,โ€ Laretteโ€™s son Joey chants โ€” Larette, Cherrise, Marisol and their colleagues are themselves underprotected from the virus, which they eventually contract, and from the domestic dramas that seep from home into their pressure-cooker days. Fearful that her mom will die, Cherriseโ€™s teenage daughter, Raquel, convinces Joey to drive her to the hospital from the date farm where Raquel has been deposited into her Auntie Loloโ€™s care. The drive should take two hours, but the teens are MIA for two nightmare days. Having narrowly escaped a would-be captor, Raquel remains haunted by her near fate. โ€œThe fingers in her hair pulling so hard her scalp felt like it had tiny bubbles under the skin. Wait till I pull your hair for real, bitch. She heard him even now.โ€

Diving deeper than the quotidian insults of her charactersโ€™ loneliness, poverty and fear, Straight brings us inside their exhausted minds. Attempting a nap, Larette lies on the break room cot, eyes closed, to no avail. โ€œGhost fingers in her left palm. Her right hand holding the phone on FaceTime for the wives. The husbands. The children who were grown,โ€ she writes. โ€œAll their faces. Stoic. Weeping. Biting their lips so hard.โ€ Later, Larette tells her husband, โ€œEveryone you see on TV, banging pots and pans, everyone doing parades, itโ€™s so nice. But then I have to be all alone with โ€” their breath. Their breath just โ€” it slows down and itโ€™s terrifying every time.โ€

Perhaps most painful among the nursesโ€™ many miseries is their isolation: the secrets they keep in hopes of sparing their loved ones an iota of extra suffering. โ€œNone of us are telling anyone we love about anything, Larette thought. She hadnโ€™t told [her husband] anything true in weeks.โ€

As Straightโ€™s work invariably does, โ€œSacramentโ€ challenges the prevailing notion that the overlooked Californians she centers in her work and in her life are less worthy, less interesting, less human than their wealthier, whiter, more visible urban counterparts. Programmed to equate โ€œrugged independenceโ€ with success, many advantaged Americans first appreciated human interdependence (berries in our cereal, test kits on our porches) in lockdown. In Straightโ€™s world, raising each otherโ€™s kids, feeding each otherโ€™s elders, keeping each otherโ€™s secrets, mourning the dead and fighting like hell for the living is not called exigence. Itโ€™s called life.

โ€œSacramentโ€ broadens the readerโ€™s understanding of community beyond flesh-and-blood friends, family and neighbors. The love and care that flow within her community of characters draws the reader into their bright, tight circle, making the charactersโ€™ loved ones and troubles feel like the readerโ€™s own.

Spoiler alert: The nursesโ€™ sacrifices, strengths and foibles; their families, robbed not only of their moms and wives and daughters but also of any shred of safety; and their patients โ€” who have tubes stuffed into their urethras and down their throats, blinking their desperate last moments of life into iPads as they take their final breaths โ€” will likely make the reader see and respect and love not only these characters, but the consistently brilliant author who gave them life on the page of this, her finest book.

Maran, author of โ€œThe New Old Meโ€ and other books, lives in a Silver Lake bungalow thatโ€™s even older than she is.

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