| About the Book
America was still distracted, reeling with confusion and shock
from the devastation of the Great Depression, the Dust Bowl, and
World War II, but was on the brink of an industrial revolution,
reconstruction and prosperity. During this transition, victims of a
Polio epidemic numbered in the hundreds of thousands; America
further struggled to deal with survivors, mostly children, of the
paralyzing disease that "broke America’s heart." Lucinda L.
Blomstedt contracted Polio at the age of thirteen months in the
mid-1940s and grew up struggling physically and psychologically. Her
greatest challenge was to meet the expectations of a bewildered and
beleaguered, but progressive, society which demanded not only her
compliance to preconceived ideals of the disabled child, but
unrealistic guidelines of medical, political, and public opinion.
When life seemed unfair and intolerable, Blomstedt wrote unique
poetry, essays, and short stories. She also discovered a personal
healing process that turns depression and psychological aches into
victory. Meanwhile, the world continues to steep in controversies
surrounding the Salk and Sabin polio vaccines. Have these and all
vaccines, with the practices and blunders of science, brought about
the conditions for global death? Have the controversies become smoke
that keep the real issues obscured? |