The author, who contracted polio at age six, was one of many victims of the polio epidemic in Cork,
Ireland. Over 50,000 got the virus in 1956, "one of the last great outbreaks of
polio anywhere in Western Europe." An outbreak that occurred just a few years
after a vaccine had been developed in America.
The book is interesting when it describes the way that the community denied
and downplayed the effects of epidemic. Newspapers, then still the main source
of information in Ireland, never named polio victims and only published, more or
less uncritically, official reports on the epidemic. This, and apparently, the
desire of the business community to maintain economic stability in the
community, created an environment of incoherent hysteria where children
were kept home from school and public swimming pools closed, but pubs
remained opened.
Patrick Cockburn, a distinguished international news correspondent, was
gravely affected by the disease. Today, he walks with a limp, cannot run or
drive a car. He tells quite a bit of his days in hospital and feelings at the time.
He seems, though, a bit reticent about it at times, because it was so long ago and also
perhaps because of a resentment at his parents moving house to Cork, despite
warnings about the epidemic.
His parents were Claud and Patricia Cockburn. His father was a leftist writer
and his mother a daughter of Anglo-Irish upper-class parents. Both were
adventurous and neither were accustomed to changing their plans if risks were
involved. Much of the book, perhaps too much, is written about his parents and
their background. For those readers of Alexander Cockburn, Patrick's brother,
this family background is very familiar ground.
Well-written and interesting in places, this is a slight contribution to the
literature on diseases and epidemics. Cockburn laments the lack of information
on polio epidemic in Cork, so perhaps this is spadework for another, larger
book. For those who are interested in epidemics in general, Cockburn points to
a classic account, Journal of a Plague Year by Daniel Defoe.