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The Life and Death of Smallpox

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"The most terrible of all the ministers of death." Thomas Macauley Mozart, Voltaire, Elizabeth I and Abraham Lincoln all had it--and survived. Millions did not. The scourge of smallpox affected rich and poor alike, killing many and disfiguring the rest. 'Cures' included bleeding, purging, oil of scorpions and even crabs' eyes. Edward Jenner's breakthrough in 1796 started the slow, often controversial, process of controlling the virus. By 1979 smallpox had become the first-ever disease to be eradicated. Yet, today, its possible use in biological warfare presents a major threat. This is an accessible account of the history, and possible future, of a terrifying disease. Ian Glynn is Professor of Physiology Emeritus at Cambridge University and Fellow of Trinity College. He is the author of An Anatomy of Thought (Oxford, 2000). Jenifer Glynn is a Cambridge historian and author of Tidings from Zion (Tauris, 2000).

292 pages, Hardcover

First published August 30, 2004

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Ian Glynn

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
239 reviews1 follower
April 20, 2024
This is an interesting topic but its scope is far too broad and this results in very uneven treatment of the narrative. It feels like the author has gathered as much material on smallpox as can be amassed from ancient times onwards and then wades through the evidence in chronological order and continent by continent.

The final third of the book includes two sections that I struggled with: one chapter on the viruses by the end of which I had lost track of the difference between vaccination and variolation, and variola minor and variola major. And after an uplifting chapter on the fantastic effort to annihilate the killer disease on a global scale seemingly once and for all time, the final chapter unleashes a warning shot of apocalyptic events if smallpox was to be used as a bio-terrorist weapon. Worthy sentiment but out of place in my view in a book on the history and death of a particular disease.

Much of the book , though, is a worthwhile read, especially to record the triumph of Edward Jenner. His achievement leading to the saving of millions of lives on a global scale should be celebrated world wide and he should be high up in any list of famous people.
Profile Image for Eleanor.
374 reviews3 followers
May 12, 2019
As someone who has always been fascinated by epidemics and vaccines this was a must read for me, and it did not disappoint. I thought I knew a lot about smallpox and its eradication before, but I learned an enormous amount reading this book. In particular I enjoyed reading about the attempts to "vaccinate" against it before Jenner's breakthrough, and the ingenuity of people in the absence of sophisticated medical knowledge.
Profile Image for Shea Mastison.
189 reviews29 followers
March 25, 2012
The pacing of the writing is a little out of whack. They start off very intricately in the earlier (and more dramatic) past of small pox; fast forward a century in a single paragraph, and then break into explaining how the Russians and Americans are the only two governments that even have live small pox material in the world--likely for weapons uses.
Ahhhh, life's great with such paternalistic governments. Good thing they stopped giving vaccinations long ago: it will make their weapons all the more potent!
Profile Image for Dan.
16 reviews
January 12, 2010
Excellent book about the history of smallpox, as well as the science of the disease and how it was eventually eradicated. One of the best books I read in 2009 by far. Well-written, easy to understand, and graphic enough to make you grateful that smallpox no longer troubles us.
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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