Fiction.
African
&
African
American
Studies.
It's
1919,
a
time
when
traveling
medicine
shows
can
still
find
audiences
eager
to
buy
miracle
"cures"
and
watch
old-fashioned
variety
acts
onstage.
Stephanie
Allen's
novel
TONIC
AND
BALM
follows
one
such
troupe,
Doc
Bell's
Miracles
and
Mirth
Medicine
Show,
as
it
winds
through
Pennsylvania,
struggling
to
stay
afloat
amidst
internal
discord
and
dwindling
revenues.
Doc
Bell's
show,
which
features
both
black
and
white
performers,
includes
a
song-and-dance
team
whose
marriage
is
fraying,
a
sword-swallower
and
her
charming
but
fickle
lover,
and
a
medical
doctor
in
a
downward
spiral
of
alcoholism.
Performers
and
crew
alike
are
caught
off-balance
when
the
show
takes
on
a
new
addition,
a
young
woman
with
hydrocephaly,
who
finds
herself
cast
into
a
dismaying
role
as
a
sideshow
exhibit.
Set
against
a
backdrop
of
rural
poverty
and
a
wave
of
anti-black
violence,
TONIC
AND
BALM
examines
the
tenuous
solidarity
and
shifting
alliances
of
people
on
the
fringes
of
society.
"Uses
the
medicine
show]
to
explore
larger
issues
of
race,
class,
and
gender...Gives
us
characters
who
defy
stereotypes."--NPR"Fearlessly
offers
the
B-side
of
American
culture--more
sultry,
racially
turbulent,
eccentric,
harrowing,
even
redemptive."--Howard
Norman
"A
fascinating
look
at
an]
itinerant
troupe
and
their
hardscrabble
world.
Black,
white,
hetero,
gay--about
the
only
thing
the
performers
share
in
common
is
their
poverty,
a
trait
which
also
marks
their
audiences...Highly
recommended."--Historical
Novels
Review"An
unforgettable
chorus
of
con
men,
roustabouts,
and
'freaks'
that
broke
my
heart
while
also
leaving
me
uplifted
and
wanting
more."--David
Haynes
"The
multivocal
narration
of
the
troupe
makes
the
book
resemble
its
subject.
Each
new
story
is
another
act,
another
performer...An
unusual
book
on
an
unusual
topic,
and
a
fine
fictional
chronicle
of
a
lost
art."--Masters
Review"Entertaining
and
deeply
affecting...
TONIC
AND
BALM,
...
like
the
medicine
show
itself,
is
wonderfully
strange
and
haunts
the
imagination
long
after
the
players
have
exited
the
stage."--Small
Press
Picks"Even
as
the
characters]
fight
against
each
other...,
they
push
harder
to
remain
connected...We
are
with
them
at
each
moment,
pulled
in
deeper
and
deeper
at
every
turn
of
the
page."--Fiction
Writers
Review"Restores
the
voices
of
overlooked
American
exiles,
a
troupe
of
people
striving
for
their
day
in
the
sun."--Cathy
Day Citește tot Restrânge