
Interview with Trisha Pritikin, London Book Festival Fiction Winner
THEN CAME THE SUMMER SNOW
by Trisha T. Pritikin
(Moonshine Cove Press, 2025)
Q: What does “summer snow” refer to?
Great question. “Summer snow” refers to radioactive ruthenium flakes that fell
during summer months in the early 1950s, blanketing the town of Richland,
Washington as well as farmlands across the Columbia River. The ruthenium was
released from exhaust stacks at the massive, secretive Hanford atomic weapons
production site near Richland in southeastern Washington state.
“Summer snow” also refers to airborne radioactive flakes and other particles
from atomic tests that began in 1951 at the Nevada Test Site (NTS). The tests
generated huge clouds of fallout that drifted onto communities downwind of the
test site.
Q: Can you tell us about THEN CAME THE SUMMER SNOW?
THEN CAME THE SUMMER SNOW evokes the comedy, pathos and tragedy of 1950s
America, a decade rich in delusion, prejudice, and patriotism. Richland,
Washington housed Hanford’s engineers, scientists, chemists, other white-collar
professionals, and their families. Richland was a government-owned atomic town
where neighbors and friends were FBI informants and the families of those who
talked were often ‘disappeared’ in the night.
The reader is introduced to the Higgenbothum family on an ordinary afternoon in
1958. Herbie Higgenbothum, ten-years-old, tinkers with the Geiger counter his
father recently acquired for weekend uranium prospecting. When Herbie powers up
the device, it emits a barrage of clicks, revealing that the milk in Herbie’s
nearby glass is radioactive.
Edith’s husband Herb immediately understands the implications of Herbie’s
discovery. As a security-cleared Hanford engineer, he is well aware that the
site secretly releases radioactive byproducts of plutonium production, including
radioactive iodine, through its exhaust stacks. He has always relied on the
assurances of the Atomic Energy Commission and Hanford management that levels of
radiation in communities around Hanford are too low to be of concern. He is
therefore baffled by this discovery that local milk contains significant
radiation. Herb nonetheless assures Edith that the milk is safe, and tells her
that the Geiger counter is clearly defective.
Meanwhile, Herb secretly uses Edith’s typewriter to type a letter to his
superiors in which he seeks assurances that radiation in local milk will not
harm his son. When she is cleaning the house, Edith discovers a carbon copy of
the letter that has fallen behind the desk. From the letter, she now understands
that her husband lied to her—the Geiger counter did not malfunction when it
detected the presence of radiation in Herbie’s milk. She no longer trusts Herb,
and as her anger at him grows, it causes a marital rift.
When potentially cancerous nodules are found on Herbie’s thyroid, Edith is faced
with the very real possibility her son has thyroid cancer caused by radioactive
iodine in local milk. Edith evolves before the reader’s eyes, shedding the
proper 1950s veneer of a dutiful housewife, growing in confidence and authority
to become a thorn in the side of those who value atomic secrecy over the health
of downwind communities.
Based on the real-life town of Richland, Washington, the novel takes the reader
along on a true atomic age hero’s journey filled with shape shifters,
tricksters, and mothers whose only motivation is to save their children, no
matter what the stakes.
Q: Could the US government have protected downwind populations from the
radiation it released from Hanford’s stacks?
Yes, the public could have been protected through inexpensive, highly effective
public health measures, yet government officials refused to implement these
measures.
It was known years before radioactive iodine was released from Hanford’s exhaust
stacks that radioactive iodine (in this case, primarily I-131) can be absorbed
by the thyroid, particularly in infants and children, leading to severe damage
or total destruction of the developing thyroid, and possibly, to thyroid cancer.
I-131 travelled from Hanford’s exhaust stacks onto pasture grass downwind of the
site. Cows and goats grazed on the contaminated grass, and the I-131 made its
way into the animals’ milk supply. This was referred to as the “milk pathway,”
and was one of the primary ways infants and children ingested high levels of
I-131. I-131 was also released from atomic tests at the Nevada Test site, and in
fallout from other Manhattan Project and Cold war atomic weapons production and
testing sites, damaging the thyroids of infants, children and adults downwind of
those sites.
It was understood at the time that potassium iodide (KI) tablets could be given
to the population to block uptake of I-131. Another recommendation made by
public health officials but not implemented by the Atomic Energy Commission, was
that only iodized table salt be made available locally, as iodized salt would
help block uptake of I-131. Neither public health measure was undertaken because
officials feared the public would become “unduly alarmed” should people learn
their environment was full of airborne radiation.
Q: Why did you choose to write about this topic?
I was born and raised in Richland during the 1950s. Following the wartime
Manhattan Project, Hanford ramped up plutonium production to meet the Cold War
demands of the nuclear arms race between the US and former Soviet Union.
Hanford manufactured the plutonium for the world’s first test of an atomic bomb,
the Trinity Test, detonated July 16, 1945 at Alamogordo, NM, and for Fat Man,
the atomic bomb that decimated Nagasaki on August 9, 1945.
Beginning in late 1944, and for more than forty years thereafter, Hanford
operators secretly released millions of curies of radiation, the radioactive
byproducts of plutonium production, to the air and into the waters of the
Columbia River, exposing civilians downwind and downriver. Infants and children
were especially susceptible to the damaging effects of radiation exposure.
Hanford’s airborne radiation spread into British Columbia and across eastern
Washington, northern Oregon, Idaho and into Western Montana.
I now suffer from Hashimoto’s thyroiditis, hypoparathyroidism, congenital joint
deformities, and other disabling health issues more likely than not caused by
exposure to Hanford’s radiation in utero and during childhood. My only sibling
died shortly after birth, part of a spike of neonatal deaths downwind of
Hanford. My father, a Hanford engineer, died of aggressive metastatic thyroid
cancer, and my mother passed away from aggressive, metastatic malignant
melanoma. I am the only surviving member of my immediate family.
In THEN CAME THE SUMMER SNOW, I used the unique opportunity that fiction
provides to create a world in which a housewife in Richland, inadvertently
discovering that the milk in her child’s glass is radioactive, courageously
challenges her atomic engineer husband as well as the Atomic Energy Commission,
questioning whether Richland is a safe place to raise a family. I so wish I’d
had an Edith Higgenbothum in my life.
I have worked for over thirty-five years to secure at least a modicum of justice
for those who, like my family, struggle with, or have already succumbed to,
cancer and other health damage caused by exposure to ionizing radiation downwind
of Manhattan Project and Cold War nuclear weapons production and testing sites,
nuclear waste storage sites, and modern day nuclear power reactor accidents.
I am also the author of the award-winning The Hanford Plaintiffs: Voices from
the Fight for Atomic Justice, (University Press of Kansas, 2020) which
includes the oral histories (including my own) of Hanford downwinders who filed
personal injury claims against Hanford contractors for radiation exposure in
mass toxic tort personal injury litigation, In re Hanford Nuclear Reservation
Litigation.
Our stories serve as irrefutable evidence of the devastating human toll of
production, testing and use of nuclear weapons.
