A Theory in Vienna Blog Tour

A Theory in Vienna Blog Tour

A Theory in Vienna blog tour is through The Coffee Pot Book Club. Read an exclusive excerpt from the book, give feedback to the author, share, and comment.

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Book Title and Author Name:

A Theory in Vienna book cover

A Theory in Vienna

by Heidi Gallacher

Blurb:

‘I bring to light a truth, which was unknown for many centuries with direful results for the human race.’ – Ignaz Philipp Semmelweis.

Imagine you’d discovered something. Something that could save hundreds of thousands of lives. But they wouldn’t let you tell anyone. Wouldn’t it drive you mad?

Young Hungarian doctor Ignaz Semmelweis uncovers the real reason thousands of young women are dying after childbirth. Yet, in mid-19th century Europe, his simple methods are ridiculed. Semmelweis faces the battle of his life to convince others that the cause is simple…

Based on the true story of a forgotten hero, A Theory in Vienna brings the remarkable story of this man to life.

Buy Links:

Universal Buy Link: https://books2read.com/u/47aKa7

The Book Guild Buy Link: https://bookguild.co.uk/bookshop/historical/a-theory-in-vienna

Author Bio:

Heidi Gallacher author photo

Heidi was born in London in the Sixties. She grew up in South Wales, UK and moved to Paris as a young adult where she taught English for two years. She currently lives in Switzerland and recently completed an MA in Creative Writing.

Her first short story was published in Prima magazine (UK) in 2018. Heidi now writes historical fiction. Her first novel, Rebecca’s Choice is set in Tredelerch – an old house in Wales that belonged to her family generations ago. This novel won an award from The Coffee Pot Book Club in 2020, Debut Novel Bronze Medal.

Her second novel, A Theory in Vienna, is set in 19th century Vienna and Budapest. It tells the incredible story of unsung hero Ignaz Semmelweis, whose life-saving discovery was ridiculed at the time.

Heidi enjoys travelling (the further North the better!), singing and writing songs, and spending time reading and writing at her Swiss chalet where the views are amazing.  

Author Links:

Author Page on Publisher’s Website: https://bookguild.co.uk/our-authors/heidi-gallacher

Twitter / X: https://x.com/heidigallacher

Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/Deejotix

Instagram:  https://www.instagram.com/gallacherauthor

Threads: https://www.threads.com/@gallacherauthor

Pinterest: https://pin.it/6KRlgRXOb

Amazon Author Page: https://www.amazon.co.uk/stores/Heidi-Gallacher/author/B08192R91P

Goodreads:  https://www.goodreads.com/user/show/86827681

Excerpt 1:

This excerpt establishes the main theme and the high stakes.

Prologue

Vienna, July 1847

Helga winces as a contraction ripples through her. She knows it is time. She dresses and then wakes her mother, who will accompany her to the lying-in clinic. Within the half-hour they are ready, shawls wrapped tightly around them. Helga clutches the banisters as she follows her mother down the stairs and out onto the street. Slivers of dawn start to separate the darkness as the women link arms.

She finds it hard to place one foot in front of the other as they shuffle past dark alleyways. In one of them, an old man bares his teeth and howls. She grips her mother’s hand, grateful for her presence.

The sky before them leaches blood red as they reach the gatehouse of the sprawling institution. Helga slows; her cramps are coming closer and closer. She bites on her shawl as they climb the stone steps in front of them. The oaken door is huge and Helga can barely hear the sound of her own knock.

As dawn lightens the shiny pebbles of the courtyard, the door swings inwards and two nurses appear, one slender, one rotund. They remind Helga of nuns in their dark flannel, floor-length uniforms. They close the door behind her and she falls to her knees, groaning. The nurses lift her and guide her over to a staircase. A young girl is descending, shaking her head violently as she squeezes past them, rags swathing her prominent belly. Helga stares after her. Candles glow in sconces high on the walls, scattering monstrous shadows.

‘Helga, we must ask them. Don’t you remember … all the talk about the clinics?’

Helga stares at her mother, before strong arms guide her upwards and soothing voices smother her. She has a vague memory of a worry her mother had … something to do with the doctors, but she cannot grasp hold of it.

A desk dominates the desolate landing. Helga stares into the pale eyes of the young man sitting behind it, who nods and announces he is a doctor. There are muffled voices far away and she wrinkles her nose at the smells of blood, and sweat.

‘Helga. Please -’

She turns, gritting her teeth as another contraction tears at her.

‘Pray, what is it, Mother?’

Her mother’s eyes are bright with fear.

‘Herr Doctor. Please … where is the ward with the midwives? My daughter would like her baby to be delivered there.’

Helga’s baby kicks her hard.

‘Mother, please … I am quite desperate to lie down.’

The doctor takes his quill and scratches his parchment with a flourish.

‘Madam, it is Sunday morning. From Friday to Sunday we only admit patients to the First Clinic.’

‘Is that the doctors’ ward? The ward with the students?’

‘Yes.’

‘I beg you, no, please don’t take my daughter there.’ She steps back, her hands trembling.

‘Calm yourself, madam. The doctors will attend to the birth. This hospital has rules, and we must follow them.’ He turns to the nurses. ‘Take her to the First Clinic, forthwith.’

‘No … no, you cannot …’

The nurses shrug and there is no surprise in their eyes. They gather Helga’s elbows and walk down the corridor towards the First Clinic. Helga looks back, to see that her mother is weeping.

Inside the ward she feels a chill, despite the fireplaces burning at either end of the room. There are a dozen beds on either side, most of which are occupied. She puzzles how she will get any sleep amid the noise and the clamour. The nurses whisper that the medical students have just arrived from their early morning dissections in the deadhouse. Helga is shown to her bed at last. She does not care that the sheets are torn or that there is paint peeling quite dreadfully on the walls surrounding her; she feels only relief to lift her swollen ankles from the ground.

A student runs over and glances at her, frowning. He tugs his bottom lip and mumbles that he needs to examine her. He raises her petticoats. She closes her eyes and tells herself that it will be over soon. When he has finished examining her he wipes his bloody hands on his waistcoat and leaves.

She loses count of the times that morning that dirty, clumsy hands push inside her. Ragged nails tag and tear. The students tell her to ‘be a good girl and to keep still.’

All the while her regular pains are coming ever closer.

When a nurse brings her lunch, Helga tells her to take the pale soup away. An urgency seizes her, a strong feeling that she should push. Nurses come; they gather at the end of her bed. They glare as the doctors pull up her petticoats and push their fingers inside once again.

‘We must learn,’ a chubby, bespectacled student says. ‘It is so important that we learn.’

                                                                            *

The cry of her newborn is sweet and she is overwhelmed with joy. She names him Georg. Her baby seems tiny, yet the nurses tell her ‘he is bigger than the average.’

They clean him and offer him to Helga and she swoons as she smells his soft baby scent. How his father would have adored him. He has an abundance of black, silky hair, the exact colour of her own. She is a mother now, and she cannot wait to show him to her own mother. She kisses the top of her baby’s head and the nurses tuck him into the folds of her shawl. She feels healthy and she smiles as she remembers her mother’s unnecessary fears. She must have fallen asleep; when she wakes she hears the gentle clearing of a throat. A young doctor whom she has not seen before is standing at the foot of her bed.

‘Let me take your baby now. You have done well and you need to rest. It is an arduous task, bringing an infant into the world.’

He takes the baby and Helga retreats into her slumber once more.

                                                                              *     

The nurses have opened the windows on the ward to let in the fresh, summer air. Helga smiles at the girl in the bed facing her, who is going home today. She may be able to return home, too, by the end of the week. They bring her baby to her and his tiny fingers curl around her breast. She gazes at him, thinking of all they will be able to do together – walking through the park, playing in the sunshine in her mother’s tiny garden. She lies with him awhile, before a slight pain causes her to grimace. She informs the nurses and they come to massage her belly and dab at her brow. She notices the looks that pass between them and tells herself to ignore their flashes of concern: it is nothing. The nurses take Georg away and she leans back on her pillow to rest.

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