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Skels

Book cover: Skels by Maggie Dubris
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Maggie Dubris
251 pages (Fall 2006); 1.3MB download
Soft Skull Press; ISBN: 1-932360-25-5
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"A vivid and poetic novel that tells the story of a young EMT plunged into the jungle that is New York City in the steamy summer of 1979. With every call to save a life, Maggie Dubris -- who worked as a 911 paramedic in Harlem and Hell's Kitchen throughout the '80s and '90s --enters a different and strange world... A vivid rendering of the lives of New York's poorest and most invisible."
- New York Post

"Dubris captures that hurried sense of absurdity that other authors, like Denis Johnson, have tackled in the emergency room-trauma story genre. And like Johnson, Dubris harnesses a dry, sick sense of humor... SKELS conveys the overwhelming feelings one has during epic moments of tragedy."
- LA Weekly

When Orlie Breton shows up in June of 1979 to work as a paramedic in New York City's 911 system, she finds herself plunged into a violent and magical world, populated by medics who are not terribly different from the homeless people -- the "skels" -- who comprise most of their patient population.

Orlie draws parallels between her experiences to the stories and feelings represented in the works of her favorite writers, including Jack London, Walt Whitman, Rimbaud, and Mark Twain. Skels was written with the question in mind of what would happen if the ambulance world really was permeated with the works of past writers, and the skels were carrying the consciousnesses of the writers themselves. What would the protagonist have done if she had met the greatest poet of all, dirty and covered with lice, and been granted the chance to save him? Not from dying, but from his own life. With Skels Dubris shares what she saw during her own time as paramedic -- not literally, but more importantly, how she felt in her soul, magical and violent and funny, filled with passion, and like it contained some ancient element that was invisible from the outside.
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