I'd like to think of myself as a student of literature first, then a doctor of medicine second. As much as I have tried to love medicine, one can't force passion on a person, so I've had a wary respect towards it during my four years of medical school. With the boards looming in the distance, however, I think I'm more scared of failure than of distaste, so I try to read up as much as I can. Even if I don't love it, I feel and think that I should give my best in its learning and practice: people's lives hang in the balance, after all, and I don't want to be someone who disrespects the noble profession.
I am all praise for this book: it's actually the first 5/5 rating I have given this 2014, and I feel that it is much deserved. Microbiology is a taxing, intensive subject, and it takes virtuosos as Messrs. Gladwin and Tratler to make such a subject both enlightening and really interesting. I expected myself to be slow in my progress with such a tedious subject, but with the illustrations, mnemonics, and coruscating wit, I finished the book far faster than I expected, with a lot of knowledge both reviewed and newly-retained. I will gladly review this book in the near future, and still expect it to be as iridescent as it was to me this very first reading.
This reviewer is highly recommended.