
At the start of Andrea Barrettโs extraordinary new novel, The Air We Breathe, we meet Leo Marburg, a Russian-born immigrant living in New York City in 1916. Trained as a chemist in the Old World, Leo is nothing more than a common laborer in America until he contracts tuberculosis. The symptoms reveal themselves at the sugar plant where he works: โThen heโd coughedโthe same cough heโd had all spring, no moreโand watched, astonished, as blood sprayed the pale crystals.โ A co-worker reports Leoโs illness to the authorities and โonce the government was involved, one step led to the next and the next, until he was cornered and forced up here.โ โHereโ is Tamarack State, a tuberculosis sanatorium in the Adirondack Mountains.
Leoโs arrival at Tamarack is a kind of baptism into a new life. He is immediately bathed by a nurse and tucked into a white-enamel bed, one of many with โtop sheets โฆ pulled so taut that the edges hovered above the blankets.โ The care at Tamarack is surprisingly humane; rest and good food and fresh air are the key elements of the TB cure. The immigrant patients and their caregivers are intelligent, thoughtful people with European educations, entirely swept up in the scientific, artistic, and social excitements of the time. Their discussions range from Roentgenโs rays, Einsteinโs theories, and Jewish communal farms in upstate New York to Stravinskyโs music, the โnew poetryโ of Carl Sandburg, socialism, suffrage, and cinematography (the art that โfreezes light, storing it like ice in an iceboxโ).
Occupying the world beyond Tamarack is The WarโWorld War I. In France, soldiers are gassed, their lungsโlike those of the tubercular patientsโcorrupted and destroyed. Eventually, the war enters the sanatorium, in the form of the vigilante-style American Protective League, leery of Tamarackโs โconstantly changing population โฆ some far from savory and a great many foreign-born.โ More crucially, suspicion and jealousy contaminate Tamarack society from within. Order and civility corrode. This finely-wrought community erupts in a terrible and sudden conflagration: โHow fast does chaos arrive? Faster than we can say it.โ
Readers are led through the events at Tamarack by a wonderfully odd and effective narrator, a plural โweโ that represents the 60 men and 60 women who reside there. This communal narrator watches, records, reflects, and comments on the events that begin with Leoโs arrival, chronicling the human interactions that grow ever more emotionally fraught, as they play out in this insular world. The narrative voice leads us gently but inexorably toward inevitable disaster. Then the voice searches for blame; examines its own individual and collective conscience; pines for absolution; and, finally, devises its own self-imposed penance.
Barrett has claimed a unique literary territory through her previous fiction, marrying science and imagination with great impact. Readers of The Air We Breathe will be pleased to reencounter characters from the 1996 National Book Award winner Ship Fever, the 2003 Pulitzer Prize finalist Servants of the Map, and The Voyage of the Narwhal. Here, once again, Barrett has woven science and story into a seamless narrative. By the end of the novel, readers have become an intimate part of Tamarack society, fortunate to have been allowed in, elated and humbled by the experience:ย โThis is what happened, we say together. Thisโthis!โis what we did.โ
Andrea Barrett will read at the New York State Writerโs Institute on November 1.
For more information, (518) 442-5620; www.albany.edu/writers.
This article appears in November 2007.









