When I saw this on Audible and that it was focused on the cultural aspect of rabies, I knew this would be really interesting, and I was not disappointed. I really enjoyed it, and I learned a whole lot about both the virus itself and how it works, as well as how this one virus has ingrained itself in cultural lore more than anything else. It shapes our language, our fears, our literature and movies, and even our science. This one virus has both taken from and given so much to humanity, it's staggering.
This book explores all of that, and does it really well. It's heartbreaking and sometimes really hard to listen to for an animal lover like me, but at the same time, I have to admit that there's no other way to understand something like this than to see how it behaves in a live host. And it's quite brutal.
I listened to the audio for this, as I do, and while I mostly enjoyed it in this format, there were some really weird audio quirks going on. It would go completely silent at times, for instance. Not like "the reader is not saying anything" silent, but "there's literally no sound, not even open mic 'air' sound, coming from my headphones right now". It's like the recording was stopped, but the tape kept rolling, and it wasn't edited out. Then there were times when it sounded like certain parts were re-recorded, because some words or phrases in the middle of a sentence or paragraph would sound different from the surrounding segments. Distracting, especially because it would tend to happen when something exciting or exuberant was being read, so it struck me as like the type of bad computer voice stuff that tries really hard to sound realistic but tends to pause and over-emphasize some things. Just weird.
Finally, as much as I highly recommend this (along with most of the nonfiction I read, because DUH, I chose it, which makes it interesting! :P), I was quite annoyed by the literature references sprinkled throughout this book.
You'd think that I would enjoy it, and ordinarily I would because I love seeing the inspiration and ideas behind things, but I think that these authors took their summaries too far, and spoiled quite a few books in the process. They were VERY liberal in their summaries, and tended to recap the whole plot on multiple occasions when it really wasn't necessary. Only one was truly spoiled for me, thankfully, because I'd read the others, but there were quite a lot of books mentioned and "analyzed" for their relation to rabies - either as direct plot, potential inspiration, or maybe-could-be-interpreted-as-rabies-if-you-squint kind of stuff. Major plot points were revealed in almost all of them. Not cool.
These include, from memory, and it's late, so it will probably NOT be all of them:
- Wuthering Heights
- Jane Eyre
- Their Eyes Were Watching God
- Old Yeller
- Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde
- Dracula
- I Am Legend
Now I know that this is a "cultural history" and so references in literature are relevant, but I think that they could have managed that without giving full on plot spoilers for these books. For the record, I do not subscribe to the "It's been out long enough, so it can't really be spoiled" school of thought regarding classics, movies, or TV. Everyone lives and reads differently, and at their own pace. just because something is a classic or has been out there in the wild for a week or a month or a year or a decade or whatever... does NOT mean that it's been experienced by everyone and that it will not still be new to someone at some point.
Anyway, marks off for that. Otherwise, this is a great book, and I highly recommend it.
That is all.