Review by Booklist Review
Yvonne, Annette, Cécile, Marie, and Émilie Dionne delighted the world in 1934. The curious public couldn't get enough of the tiny quintuplets born in Ontario at the height of the Great Depression, but Emma Trimpany had been there all along. Unsure of her future at 17, Emma fell into midwifery and was forever changed by the miracle of the quintuplets' birth. Even as custody issues, gawking tourists, and hardscrabble times swirl around her, Emma's sole focus remains on the babies. Her own future may never be set in stone, but as long as she's able to help take care of the most famous children in Canada, she knows her sacrifices will have been worthwhile. Blending historical fact with a fictional coming-of-age story, Wood has crafted an ambitious, meticulously researched, and imaginative debut novel that is engrossing and compelling. Exploring the shared sisterhood of the quintuplets' caretakers and the trouble with unwanted celebrity, this heartwarming novel will win over loyal readers of Patricia Harman, Jodi Picoult, and Carol Cassella.--Stephanie Turza Copyright 2010 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Wood's intriguing debut is a fictionalized version of the real events surrounding the birth of the Dionne quintuplets in 1934 rural Canada. In Corbeil, Ontario, 17-year-old Emma Trimpany accompanies a midwife to a birth at the Dionne home, because Emma's mother has decided that midwifery is a suitable profession for Emma. Emma assists with the birth of the five impossibly tiny girls, who are kept warm in an apple crate placed in front of a wood stove. Emma works with nurses and Dr. Allan Dafoe as they care for the young girls round the clock, trying to keep them as healthy as possible. Against all odds, the quintuplets-Marie, Cecile, Emilie, Yvonne, and Annette-continue to grow and thrive as the Canadian government steps in to provide financial assistance and eventually becomes a custodian of the quintuplets. Through Emma's journal entries and newspaper clippings, the lives of the five young girls unfold as they reside in a hospital across the road from the farmhouse where they were born and become a major tourist attraction. Wood cleverly combines fact and fiction in a fast-paced novel that will leave readers contemplating how the best intentions of government intervention can have dire, unanticipated consequences. Agent: Transatlantic Literary Agency, Inc. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
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Review by Library Journal Review
DEBUT This first novel takes on the real-life story of the Dionne Quintuplets, born in Northern Ontario in 1934. Fictional nurse Emma Trimpany follows the journey of these five girls who were taken from their French Canadian family and raised "scientifically" by the Ontario government until age nine. The Dionne Quints were a huge tourist attraction and in later life sued the government for a share of the millions made off their childhoods. This novel is told in letters and journal entries by Emma, interspersed with newspaper clippings (some real, some invented). The majority of the characters are real, and Emma's role is one of observer; when the Dionne experiment ends, the author seems a little uncertain where to take her fictional characters, and so the denouement is a series of disasters visited upon the unlucky Emma. VERDICT While the Dionne story is fascinating, the fictional elements are underdeveloped, with historical reportage taking the lead. For a deeper understanding of the true story, readers would be better off with one of the classic biographies or one of the Dionne sisters' memoirs. [See Prepub Alert, 10/1/18.]-Melanie -Kindrachuk, Stratford P.L., Ont. © Copyright 2019. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Summoned in May 1934, to help the local midwife deliver a child two months premature, Emma Trimpany, just 17 years old herself, witnesses the remarkable births of five tiny babes: the Dionne Quintuplets.Wood's debut novel tells the story of the first recorded successful delivery of quintuplets, to Elzire and Oliva Dionne in rural Canada. Through journal entries, Emma chronicles the girls' lives from the frightening first days, when the tiny, fragile babies struggled to survive every hour, through their childhoods as well as Emma's own blossoming into a nurse and young woman. Already raising five children, the Dionnes live on a farm that Dr. Allan Dafoe pronounces unfit for the quints. Initially, Dafoe transforms the Dionne's kitchen into a sterile space with incubators shipped in from Chicago; eventually, a brand-new hospital is built, devoted exclusively to the quints and their medical team, across the street from the farmhouse. In addition to recording the girls' developmental progress, Emma traces the comings and goings of various nurses, some of whom leave under shadowy circumstances. Telling the tale through Emma's perspective enables Wood to capture not only the fiery conflict between the provincial, French-speaking Dionnes and the medical team (with its well-meaning but arrogant emphasis on cleanliness and what's best technically for the children), but also Emma's uncomfortable sympathies. The conflict escalates as Oliva Dionne and Dr. Dafoe lock horns in a series of lawsuits, with Dionne trying to assert parental rights and both sides (plus the Canadian government) trying to capitalize upon the quints' popularity through advertising and movie contracts. Meanwhile, as Emma herself must decide whether mothering the quints is worth giving up her dreams of art school, she is headed for a cataclysmic change of her own.A charming and well-researched, if long-winded, tale of love and survival. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.