Spotlight & Giveaway: THE WOMAN WITH THE CURE by Lynn Cullen

Posted February 21st, 2023 by in Blog, Spotlight / 18 comments

Today it is my pleasure to Welcome author Lynn Cullen to HJ!
Spotlight&Giveaway

Hi Lynn and welcome to HJ! We’re so excited to chat with you about your new release, THE WOMAN WITH THE CURE!

 

Please summarize the book for the readers here:

THE WOMAN WITH THE CURE is a novel based on the true story of Dr. Dorothy Horstmann, the determined epidemiologist and pediatrician whose discovery turned the tide of the polio pandemic.
 

Please share your favorite line(s) or quote from this book:

“All the most powerful forces in this world are invisible to the naked eye. Like viruses. Like antibodies. Like love.”

 

Please share a few Fun facts about this book…

Until Dorothy Horstmann figured it out, scientists had some wild ideas about how the polio virus was spread. Here in the U.S., they thought flies spread it, so a massive program was launched to blanket the country with DDT sprayed from trucks and airplanes. The Swedes thought the virus was found in fruit that had fallen to the ground and sponsored a major rake-up. Another group of researchers figured it had to be in chickens’ spinal cords. Private citizens had their own ideas which they were happy to share with scientists, like the lady who dreamed that poliovirus lurked in beetles or groundhogs, she wasn’t sure which, and the man who was sure it could be cured with dog manure. Then there was a doctor in Berlin who claimed to have found success with injecting patients with their own urine, never mind the infection, the joint pain, the mental depression, the sore throat, and the fever that resulted. People were desperate! Thank goodness Dorothy’s work put an end to this nonsense.

 

What first attracts your Hero to the Heroine and vice versa?

You know how there are certain people who you just adore upon meeting them? It was like that for Dorothy and Arne. Their inner selves instantly recognized the other as soulmates. They shared similar traits—kind, curious, loving, determined, humorous, humble, wise, fun, and steadfast, not so coincidentally the traits I most admire in people.

 

Did any scene have you blushing, crying or laughing while writing it? And Why?

I cried at the ending. If I don’t cry at the ending of my books, I know that something is not working and will rewrite the last scene until the tissues come out. The tears for Dorothy as the story closed were from both happiness and sadness—joy for what she finally understands and what she has achieved, heartbreak for what she had to go through to get there.

 

Readers should read this book….

Besides feeling empowered by knowing that you can achieve anything if you bend yourself to do it, I hope, too, that you might notice those around you who quietly love and support you, willing you into being.

 

What are you currently working on? What other releases do you have in the works?

I’m still tinkering in Lynn’s Workshop (i.e. on the couch or outside under my writing tree with a laptop on my knee) but I hope I’ll be able to share something with you soon.
 

Thanks for blogging at HJ!

 

Giveaway: 1 physical book, THE WOMAN WITH THE CURE by Lynn Cullen

 

To enter Giveaway: Please complete the Rafflecopter form and Post a comment to this Q: Dorothy Horstmann once stated that it was difficult, if not impossible, for women to “have it all.” To this day, women, even in young adulthood, are aware of the choices they must make in balancing career, family, love, and personal interests. We can have it all, but in what proportions? At what age were you first aware that you had to make choices? What choices did you make? Do you have any regrets?

 
a Rafflecopter giveaway

 
 

Excerpt from THE WOMAN WITH THE CURE:

Dorothy peered through the window of the gallery. It was going to be a most peculiar autopsy. Not only was it to be performed in a surgical operating theater instead of in the morgue, but Dr. Sabin had brought his own instruments—medical bags full of them. Now masked, gowned, and gloved as if his subject were still alive, he reviewed his paraphernalia. Dozens each of scalpels, saws, scissors, and forceps were arrayed before him like the keys of a pipe organ that he was about to play. At his side, Rob‑ bie, the maestro’s assistant, prepared stacks of slides and rows of
vials. The body had not yet been brought in.
Down the row from Dorothy, the chief of medicine, Dr. Morgan (still recovering from allowing a woman on his staff), narrowed eyes deep within bony sockets. “This is ridiculous.”
The nine other doctors in attendance agreed.
He leaned forward to speak into the microphone, the light of an overhead bulb reflecting off his rocky slab of brow. “Why the elaborate production, Dr. Sabin?”
Dr. Sabin glared up through the bright lights of the operating theater, visibly irritated at being held up by the arrival of the body. “Since we are experiencing a delay, allow me to provide some background. As you know, our esteemed colleague Simon Flexner tells us that the poliovirus enters the body through the olfactory neuronal

pathway and spreads directly from there to the central nervous system.”
“Yes, we know,” said Dr. Morgan. “You can lower your mask so that we can hear you—you can’t infect the body once it comes.”
A few of the doctors chuckled.
Down on the operating floor, Dr. Sabin either didn’t hear or pretended not to. “And since Dr. Flexner says this, what does the scientific community do? Chases ways to stop it from entering the nose. Installing nasal plugs, putting powdered zinc or picric acid up the noses of children—none of this works, or worse. Some of the children permanently lost their sense of smell. Our colleagues seem to have forgotten Hippocrates: ‘First, do no harm.’”
“It’s not forgetting Hippocrates,” a doctor declared, “when you’re trying to save a child!”
Dr. Sabin waited for the gallery to settle down. “Meanwhile, more children perish from polio. Yet no one asks, is it possible that Flexner’s conclusions were based on flawed work?”
“But why should we think that?” Dr. Morgan exclaimed into the microphone. “Simon Flexner is the leading authority on polio.”
Dr. Sabin cocked his head with a little smile. “If something is not working, shouldn’t you ask yourself why?”
Behind the glass, the doctors grumbled. Next to Dorothy, Barry said, “Who does he think he is?”
Dr. Sabin scowled at the operating room door before continuing. “First of all, Flexner’s conclusion that poliovirus enters through the nose was based on research using rhesus monkeys. What if they process poliovirus differently than other kinds of monkeys, or, more importantly, humans? I’m already finding this to be so—what is true for the rhesus is not necessarily true for us. “Second, I realized that the autopsists in his studies were using dirty scalpels, with no care to sterility. The patients were already deceased, I suppose they figured, so what did it matter? But you

see, it does matter. If poliovirus on a scalpel contaminated other‑ wise unaffected tissue samples, the wrong inference could be made.” He surveyed the row of doctors. “Same goes for contamination by an autopsist not wearing a mask.”
“Do you think you might have polio?” Dr. Morgan scoffed. “Have we proven that is impossible? Gentlemen, when it comes
to polio, we have proven essentially nothing.” He paced now, his irritation growing. “Flexner’s work was sloppy, but we didn’t question it, because Flexner was the top man. All those years, wasted, because of an early wrong turn.”
The chief leaned into the microphone. “How do you know that they were wasted?”
“Where is the body?” Dr. Sabin burst out. “Robbie! Go find it!” Robbie trotted off.
Begrudgingly, Dr. Sabin returned his attention to the gallery above him and, scowling, took down his mask. “So far, in all of the sterile retrieval procedures that Dr. Ward and I have conducted, we’ve found that poliovirus in the nasal olfactory bulb is nonexistent. It’s just not there.”
“So you are saying that Simon Flexner was wrong,” said Dr.
Morgan.
“In a nutshell—yes.”
“But how does the virus get to the nervous system to cause paralysis? What’s the path?”
“Here’s the interesting thing.” Dr. Sabin paused as if reluctant to share this information. “The poliovirus may not be readily found in the digestive tissue of rhesus monkeys, but it is found in humans.” Dorothy sat back. It didn’t make sense. Polio was a disease of the nervous system, paralyzing its victims, sometimes to the point that they couldn’t breathe, like the poor child who they would be autopsying. Already other scientists were reporting finding the poliovirus in human stools. Was he saying the virus didn’t just pass

through the digestive system but grew in it? How’d it get there? How did it paralyze kids from there?
Robbie pushed into the operating room. “There’s been a holdup on the release of the body.”
Dr. Sabin flung up his hands. “That can’t be. I have all the paperwork.”
“The mother is refusing.”
“Does she not know that this is for the benefit of science?” he exclaimed, as if that were everyone’s main motivation in life.
“There are some nurses talking to her, but they can’t bring her around.”
“Do something!” he cried.
His ideas burned through Dorothy like a gulp of whiskey. To pull herself away now was painful, but someone had to help.
She made her way past trousered legs. “Excuse me. Excuse me.” Dr. Morgan stepped aside, frowning, as she adjusted the chrome head of the microphone upward. Her voice twanged across the air: “Dr. Sabin.”
He shaded his eyes. “Dr. Horstmann?”
“I know her. I know the mother. I can try to talk to her.” “Yes,” said Dorothy’s attending physician. “Yes, let Dorothy go.”
Dr. Morgan waved her off. “Go. This is no place for a woman.”

DOROTHY SAT IN THE WAITING ROOM NEXT TO THE PAtient’s mother, a young woman whose delicate arms and wrists seemed to belong to a different species next to Dorothy’s hardy Viking bones.
“Mrs. Brooks, I’m very sorry about your son Richard.”
The woman lifted her face. Tender purple bags had swollen the woman’s eyes into slits. “I remember you. You were the one who

came out and told me he was gone.” The words floated between them: You were the one who lost him.
“Is Mr. Brooks here?”
The woman plucked at the wilted flounces at her throat. “There is no Mr. Brooks. He died of a bleeding ulcer last year.”
Dorothy had only meant that she didn’t want the woman to be alone, and now she was making it worse. “Is there anyone who can be with you?”
“My sister Carolyn. But I sent her to find a lawyer.” The woman swung her head back and forth on the thin stalk of her neck, her soft brown ringlets rolling along with it. “I know I signed papers, but I changed my mind. I can’t do this to Richie.” She swallowed audibly. “I’m his mother. Doesn’t that count?”
“Yes. It does. Completely.”
The mother stared at the snapshot in her hands. “I know you want him for research.”
“Yes. To help others.”
Mrs. Brooks’s face crumpled upon itself. “Can’t you just use a monkey?”
“They say that the study of man is best studied in man.” Doro‑ thy sighed. “I fear that is true.”
Mrs. Brooks lowered the photo to her lap. “He had a temperature over 101 and was throwing up. He said he just wanted to go to bed. His legs and arms felt funny—he couldn’t make them work right—but he just wanted to go to bed.” She balled her fists, pinching the photo under her thumbs. “I wanted to take him to the hospital, but he begged me not to. He was scared of the hospital. That’s where his dad died.”
“I’m so sorry.”
“I told Richie, okay, get some sleep. We’ll see how you feel in the morning.” She raised her face. “I killed him by waiting.”
“You were doing your best.” “But it wasn’t good enough!”

Nor was Dorothy’s treatment of her son. Between her and this poor mother, the room was so thick with guilt that you could cut it into blocks.
“Do you have a child?” asked Mrs. Brooks. Their eyes met.
“No. I wish I did.” Dorothy had never told a soul that. She rarely admitted it to herself.
Mrs. Brooks touched the serrated edge of the photo. “Whenever there’s been something difficult for me to do, I tell myself, you birthed a baby, Milly. If you survived the agony of giving birth, you can do anything.”
Dorothy had delivered enough babies in her obstetric rotation to nod solemnly.
Mrs. Brooks saw that Dorothy knew what she meant. “But childbirth only lasts for hours. This— This is never going to end. What do I tell myself now? How am I going to keep living?”
Dorothy wouldn’t look away. This woman deserved the truth. “I don’t know. But you will.”
They sat, the woman’s suffering filling the empty waiting room.
Mrs. Brooks looked up from the snapshot. “Letting the doctors have him will help others?”
Dorothy nodded. “Yes.”
“Then take my baby. Somebody’s got to do something about this terrible disease.” The woman lowered her gaze back to the photo.
Dr. Sabin wasn’t the only hero.

THAT EVENING, NURSING A CUP OF SCORCHED COFFEE IN
the diner across the street from the hospital, Dorothy waited as Barry fished another sugar cube from the bowl. The restaurant, hazy with tobacco smoke and steam coming from the cooking hamburgers, was filled with young associate professors with pipes and buckled briefcases, glassy‑eyed medical students, and cigarette‑

smoking graduates with their shirtsleeves rolled up. Other than the two waitresses in white caps and aprons, and a nurse at a table with a doctor, Dorothy was the only woman in the place.
“I’m not sure what Sabin and Ward are up to, other than to at‑ tract attention.” Barry splashed the cube into his cup and stirred. “Does it really matter how the poliovirus gets to the nervous system? What counts is how we treat it once it’s there.”
Dorothy glanced over the rim of her own cup. It mattered a lot. To beat polio, you needed to snuff out the virus in the body before it attacked the nervous system—it would help if you knew where in the body you were supposed to do the snuffing. How did he not immediately see this?
“At any rate, sorry you missed the production, Dot, but thanks for talking sense into that mother. There would have been no show if you hadn’t tied her up until those characters got it done.”
Her blood blazed. “I wasn’t trying to tie her up. It was her choice to let them use her son. She wanted to make a contribution to research.”
He tipped back his cup to get the last drop. “Well, thanks for taking the bullet. That sure was civilized of you.”
She was about to say that her being civilized had nothing to do with it—did he not see this woman’s sacrifice?—when Albert Sabin stalked into the diner.

Excerpted from THE WOMAN WITH THE CURE by Lynn Cullen, published by Berkley, an imprint of Penguin Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Random House, LLC. Copyright © 2023

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
 
 

Book Info:

In 1940s and ’50s America, polio is as dreaded as the atomic bomb. No one’s life is untouched by this disease that kills or paralyzes its victims, particularly children. Outbreaks of the virus across the country regularly put American cities in lockdown. Some of the world’s best minds are engaged in the race to find a vaccine. The man who succeeds will be a god.

But Dorothy Horstmann is not focused on beating her colleagues to the vaccine. She just wants the world to have a cure. Applying the same determination that lifted her from a humble background as the daughter of immigrants, to becoming a doctor –often the only woman in the room–she hunts down the monster where it lurks: in the blood.

This discovery of hers, and an error by a competitor, catapults her closest colleague to a lead in the race. When his chance to win comes on a worldwide scale, she is asked to sink or validate his vaccine—and to decide what is forgivable, and how much should be sacrificed, in pursuit of the cure.
Book Links: Amazon | B&N |
 
 

Meet the Author:

Lynn Cullen grew up in Fort Wayne, Indiana, and is the bestselling author of The Sisters of Summit Avenue, Twain’s End, and Mrs. Poe, which was named an NPR 2013 Great Read and an Indie Next List selection. She lives in Atlanta with her husband, their dog, and two unscrupulous cats.
Website | FacebookInstagram |
 
 
 

18 Responses to “Spotlight & Giveaway: THE WOMAN WITH THE CURE by Lynn Cullen”

  1. EC

    We can have it all, but in what proportions?

    That depends on the person. However much each proportion will be, whatever works to make the person happy with their life.

    At what age were you first aware that you had to make choices?

    As a young child, definitely before reaching the double digits.

    What choices did you make? Do you have any regrets?

    Some were given only two choices and made with the best of the two. Some were stupid ones. And some were regrettable.

  2. Mary Preston

    I had to make my biggest choices when I had children. To stay home or continue working. I opted to stay home and have no regrets.

  3. kim hansen

    I was in my late 20’s when I had to make a hard choice. No i don’t regret it.

  4. Texas Book Lover

    I made the choice to work and have my family and not go to college. If fib had it to do over I would fight to go to college but not at the expense of my family. We are very close and I couldn’t ask for better children and grandchildren!

  5. Dianne Casey

    I had to make some hard choices in my 20’s and 30’s. In my 30’s I thought it was the worst thing that ever happened to me, but it turned out to be the best choice in the long run.

  6. Lori Byrd

    I was a single mom with 3 small children. I worked 3 jobs and went to night school. I have no regrets. My children are wonderful and hard workers.

  7. Patricia B.

    Depending on what someone considers having it all, you can try but without a good partner, it is very difficult. If a woman wants a career and a family, she better have a supportive spouse who respects her talent and ambition. A single mother will find it very difficult to excel in her field while being a good, involved parent, especially to young children. There are just so many hours in the day and to advance in your career field a good portion of those hours must be focused on your work. Children get sick, have days out of school, activities, and other needs which also demand your time. It is difficult to give both sides of this coin the full attention they need without taking from the other. And…you really need to have time for yourself to refresh your body and soul. Without someone there to help, you are going to burn out.
    Our daughter is dealing with this now and finding it very difficult. I made my choice many years ago deciding being a wife and mother was the path I would take. With a husband a career military officer, the career I was interested in was not possible. It would have been nice, but I realized it would not have been possible to have that career with moving and being the parent our children needed when their father could and did leave unexpectedly for unknown periods of time.

  8. Ellen C.

    We all have to make choices, it is just how life works. I don’t regret my choices, but some times wonder what life would have been like had I made different choices.

  9. Leeza Stetson

    I don’t think you can have it all. I first became aware of having to make choices when I read in college. I regret not for following what I wanted to do. I think I might have been happier if I had.

  10. Linda F Herold

    When I had my son at age 32 I had to decide whether or not to keep working. I worked until I had my second child.