Fortnight on Maxwell Street Audiobook By David Kerns cover art

Fortnight on Maxwell Street

Preview

Audible Standard 30-day free trial

Try Standard free
Select 1 audiobook a month from our entire collection of titles.
Yours as long as you’re a member.
Get unlimited access to bingeable podcasts.
Standard auto renews for $8.99 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Fortnight on Maxwell Street

By: David Kerns
Narrated by: Doug MacKechnie
Try Standard free

$8.99 a month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Buy for $18.06

Buy for $18.06

Recipient of the Eric Hoffer Award for the Best General Fiction Book of 2018, and among the top five historical novels of 2018 selected by Kirkus Indie, Fortnight on Maxwell Street is a reluctant hero's journey of fear and courage set in Chicago in the spring of 1968.

Twenty-four-year-old medical student Nick Weissman spends two weeks delivering babies in the kitchens and bedrooms of the inner city's slum tenements. Over his head medically and unprotected in one of America's most dangerous neighborhoods, his character and resourcefulness are tested in the extreme when a national tragedy intervenes.

The young White protagonist steps into his racial fear, testing his fledgling professionalism and his honor to care for a Black family in grave danger. The embodiment of racial hatred, James Earl Ray moves in parallel with Nick, stalking Martin Luther King, Jr., killing him, and igniting the urban chaos that is the setting for the climax of the story.

Praise for the book:

"David Kerns' Fortnight on Maxwell Street is a suspenseful medical odyssey that dances along a high wire of racial tension during a tragic and historic American moment." (James McManus, author of New York Times best seller Positively Fifth Street)

“A propulsive, harrowing, and moving read, from beginning to end. David Kerns delivers a nuanced portrayal of racism as a spectrum disease. We see how heroes and villains are made, how character is forged in the crucible of a historical moment. Fortnight on Maxwell Street rings absolutely, heart-stoppingly true. A book for our time.” (Jessica Grant, author of Come, Thou Tortoise)

“With craft and compassion, David Kerns has written a gripping story of one young medical student’s journey into America’s racial divide in 1968 Chicago.” (Hillary Homzie, author of Queen of Likes and The Hot List)

©2018 David Kerns (P)2020 David Kerns
Historical Fiction Chicago Medical Fiction Genre Fiction Tearjerking Heartfelt
All stars
Most relevant

Listener received this title free

I think this made it even better since I am a nurse, but I think I would have enjoyed almost as much if I wasn't a medical professional. I would recommend this book to anyone who likes a good story. I was given this book for free, to write an honest review. I would have gladly bought it or used a credit though. It's that good!!

This was an awesome novel!

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

Listener received this title free

Fortnight on Maxwell Street by David Kerns is an intriguing book as it gives an inside view of what happened during the 1968 racial tensions in Chicago. As a medical student, just weeks away from becoming a full-fledged doctor, Nick Weissman must spend the next few weeks delivering babies in homes located in unsafe, dangerous neighborhoods found in the inner city of Chicago.

Almost mirrored each move that Nick makes, we see James Earl Ray move almost in alignment. Faced with growing racial tensions and chaos created by Ray, Nick must face his fear and decide what type of man/doctor he intends to be. When no one else is willing to travel the streets during this chaotic time, Nick puts his fear aside and steps up to help a young Black girl and her babies who are facing death during an unsafe and unsupervised home delivery.

Kerns does a magnificent job of portraying hatred, danger, and tension – the chaos that reigned is vivid in his rich details and character/plot development. Kerns captures the unrest and fear, the dreadful conditions of inner-city life, inequality, and racial divide of the time as only a skilled storyteller can. While suspenseful, the book is a reminder that we as a people have not moved much in our thinking or actions since then thus making this a highly emotional and poignant story.
The narrator, Doug MacKechnie, gives an excellent performance moving the story along as the book progresses. His voices are well done and capture the fear and confusion of the characters well. MacKechnie’s strong voices gave credibility to each character.

There were no issues with the production or quality of this audiobook. It was clear and well done.

I highly recommend this book; a bit slow in the beginning it quickly picks up keeping the listener intrigued.

Disclaimer: This Audiobook was provided free of charge by the author, narrator, and/or publisher in exchange for a non-bias, honest review.

Suspenseful and Poignant Story

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

Listener received this title free

This is a gripping story of racial tension and human relations with strongly developed and very realistic characters. The narration by Doug MacKechnie is outstanding and truly enhances the story. I am very impressed with this audiobook and can strongly recommend it.

Note: I was given this free review copy audiobook at my request and have voluntarily left this review.

A gripping yet poignant story

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

This, my first exposure to the work of David Kerns, was richly satisfying. The multiple storylines were woven together into a masterfully crafted and compelling story that, I must admit, was so captivating I binged on listening to this audiobook. Narrator Doug MacKechnie does a great job of providing a distinct voice for the numerous characters, making it easy to follow what proves to be a wild ride at times. Dr. Kerns does an outstanding job of capturing the complexities of the times in his characters and the stories, from politics to race and culture, from national to local street drama. Set in Chicago’s dangerous south side in 1968, the journey and challenges of the protagonist are exacerbated when the parallel story of James Earl Ray and his journey to assassinate Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. collide and riots ensue – yet young teen mothers with babies about to be born cannot wait for calmer times. A great job by Dr. Kerns.

So captivating I binged on it!

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

This is a fascinating peek into a time and place full of tension, excitement, and humanity. Well written and well narrated. Highly recommend.

Loved it.

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

See more reviews