![]() ![]() Powerful and clear-eyed, “Inferno” not only explores a deadly virus and an afflicted country, but also reveals how the Ebola outbreak stoked nativist anxieties that were and continue to be exploited for political gain in the U.S. Six months later, several of his physician colleagues were dead or unable to work. ![]() Hatch arrived in Liberia in November 2013 to work at a hospital in Monrovia. 23, 2018, report on the latest outbreak in the DRC states 20 new cases of the illness in the prior 48 hours. Hatch shares the complex context of the crisis with hope that by understanding and alleviating those circumstances, we might help smother the fire next time, but have we? A Nov. In telling one doctor’s story, “Inferno” demonstrates how generations of inequality left Liberia vulnerable to crisis. 2 at the Paul Pratt Memorial Library, 35 Ripley Road, Cohasset. Steven Hatch will read from his book, “Inferno: A Doctor’s Ebola Story,” at 4 p.m. ![]()
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