“The Great Influenza”

December 11, 2011 in American History, Biological Science, History, History of Science, Medical Science, Military / Warfare, Modern History, Political, Science, »

The Great Influenza by John M. Barry is a fascinating look at the influenza pandemic that rocked the world in 1918.  This terrifying virus killed between 3-6% of the world’s population between June 1918 and December 1920, and infected almost 30%.  It is a history book, but it is heavy in the science. It is a thoroughly detailed book, providing information and statistics from around the globe during the outbreak, although the book gives the most time to those in the United States.

The perspective of The Great Influenza is primarily one of American citizens and cities and American scientists and doctors.  It is set in the backdrop of the country’s transition to “modern medicine” from the period of home remedies and folk cures.  A large portion of the early book is focused on laying a foundation for the tale of the pandemic by giving a detailed look at American medical history.  I found this section of the book interesting and enjoyed the overlap it had with several books I’d recently read from the same time period, but I can see how one might find it extraneous to the story.

Once you are past the more dry sections of the book, The Great Influenza reads very much like a suspense thriller – because it was.  Pandemics are already scary by nature, and this book is no help to that fear. There are so many levels of concern: From the nature of the lethal virus itself, to the reactions of the politicians who were more worried about worrying people than saving them, to the total ineffectiveness of most measures taken to stop the spread.  The result is fascinating, but chilling.

The book also contained a lot of information that people might not have been aware of.  Just as an example, I always remember being told that the reason the virus killed so many healthy young adults was because it was primarily confined to the military populations for the Great War.  I’m sure others have heard similar things.  While it is true that the War greatly aggravated the spread on many fronts, a major reason why so many young and healthy died is because the virus causes something called cytokine storm which is an overreaction of the immune system.  For this reason, the people with the healthiest immune systems often ended up facing the most lethal symptoms, as their systems went into overdrive and killed them.

The rest of the book is devoted to the scientists and doctors who dedicated their lives during the pandemic to its cause.  Discovering the nature of the virus, its causes, how it was spread, why it was so deadly, and how to stop it was a unifying goal for many of these people.  The Great Influenza tells their individual and collective stories, and discusses the work they did and any insight they were able to shine on the pandemic that was devastating the world.   The book is not just about how the flu impacted the world, but how the world impacted the flu.

Overall, the book is extremely well-researched and covers a huge scope of history, politics, and medical science for many decades.  It is apparent that Barry put in a tireless effort to provide us with a thorough and informative book.  It is absolutely worth reading not just for the story of the 1918 influenza, but also because of the illumination it provides on how the world should (and shouldn’t) handle future pandemics.

 

On Amazon.com: Kindle or in Paperback.

“Bonk”

September 14, 2011 in "PopSci", Biological Science, History of Science, Medical Science, Pop Culture, Science, »

BonkBonk: The Curious Coupling of Science and Sex by Mary Roach is typical of her other books: it’s full of fun, interesting science, and is a little bit of crazy and a lot of hilarity. Having already traveled to the morgue and outer space with Roach, I was more than enthusiastic to follow her into the bedroom.

The book is, obviously, about sex. You will read about genitals and toys and the author having, ahem, relations in an MRI. If that makes you blush, you probably might want to avoid this book. Or, better yet, put another dust jacket on it and read it anyway.

A quick read, Bonk covers a lot of topics but none of them go particularly in-depth. The organisation is more thematic than topic-based, so you might find your anatomy lesson spread out through several chapters rather than all consolidated into a single “About: Genitals” chapter (for my purposes, I’ll cover things more topically). The book doesn’t cover much in the way of sexuality — although it’s obviously relevant and still discussed — it’s more about the act itself.

Being a book focused on the science of sex, the bulk of the book is really about research into the field. We get a lot about the people who really started it all – famous names like the Masters & Johnson partnership and Alfred Kinsey. These researchers not only paved the way for current studies but also provide plenty of weird or amusing anecdotes as a result of being the first to do things in a time when it wasn’t an acceptable area of study.

In addition to learning about research of the past, the studies and tools used now are investigated as well. Roach paints a very enlightening picture of what kind of sex research occurs today and how it’s done. Think internal cameras and imaging machines and all other sorts of awkward means of measurement. Roach interviews people who participant in these studies, as well as taking part in several herself.

Roach of course covers the basic stuff, always clever and peppered with funny stories. The anatomy and the biology behind sex: genitals, hormones, fertility. We get some psychology, gender issues, sexuality as well. She discusses masturbation and sex toys and practices.

Sexual impotence and dysfunction is also a theme within the book. The book also covers sex for people suffering physical handicaps like paralysis. You will read about cutting edge (and eye-widening) surgeries, implants and the doctors that do them, and the doctors who innovate and perform these procedures and the people that get them. You’ll also learn about other wacky ways things things are approached – now and in the past.

The book has plenty of funny, relevant stories, as well. You’ll read about the guy who implanted suckers with goat testicles to increase fertility (the subject of another book I just read, in fact), about pig orgasms, sex monkeys, impotence court trials and porn star crotch licenses. Additionally, Roach uses a ton of footnotes, which are often as good at the text itself – don’t skip them!

While Bonk is not my favourite book of hers — Stiff still holds this title — it is not because this book is lacking so much as the others set a very high bar. It’s a great read and you’ll come away a little more informed and a little more amused.

On Amazon: Paperback and Kindle

“The Disappearing Spoon”

August 4, 2011 in "PopSci", Chemistry, History, History of Science, Science, »

Disappearing SpoonOf the dozens of books I’ve read this year, The Disappearing Spoon: And Other True Tales of Madness, Love, and the History of the World from the Periodic Table of the Elements by Sam Kean is my easily my favourite. It was very fun to read, accessible, and written with a refreshing cleverness that was just the right balance of information and fun. It would be an understatement to say I learned a lot and not hyperbole to say I had a great time doing it.

At it’s core, The Disappearing Spoon is a science history book about chemistry, the periodic table. It feels terribly unfair to reduce the book to something that sounds so dry, but there it is.

Keans introduces us to every element on the periodic table. The goal is obviously to get us to appreciate every single one, so he emphasises what makes it special or interesting. Sometimes we learn how or where it was discovered or by whom, but sometimes it focuses entirely on why it is unique and what it can do. If that element made an impact on our world, physically, culturally, economically… we learn how and why, and we learn to love it in the same way the author does.

The book is not consistent with what we learn for every element — some things get multiple pages while others just a short blurb — but that’s okay because we’re getting the fascinating stuff. Most of the elements get their own time in the spotlight, while a few are discussed along with their close chemical relatives.

This is a hard book to write about without writing too much or too little. It’s hard to choose a few highlights to share without neglecting things that probably deserve attention. But if you want to learn about Tycho Brahe’s prosthetic nose, or how silicon revolutionised computers, about crazy poisons or wild drugs, explosions, Fauste, weapon technology, black holes, people turning blue, homemade nuclear reactors, why Americans drop the ‘i’ from ‘aluminium’, other bizarre stories, this book will have something for you.

I’ve already found myself repeating the amusing anecdotes or information from the book to people. Twice I insisted on reading a passage to someone I know would appreciate a tale within. For a book that is intended to be very limited in scope, you will learn about so much beyond the periodic table. I was just so excited about it that it was impossible not to want to share things; this book will boost your trivia knowledge, but it also might make you the obnoxious know-it-all at parties.

To my chagrin, I was unenthusiastic about reading The Disappearing Spoon initially since a book about the periodic table doesn’t exactly sound like a rip-roaring adventure. Even when I did finally order it, it sat around on my Kindle for six months before I finally gave it a go. It makes me a little sad to admit that if so many people hadn’t raved about it, I never would have read it at all. I am so glad I gave this book a chance, and I hope you will too.

 

On Amazon: Paperback | Hardback | Kindle