Now, right off the bat, it should be known that I am most assuredly not the intended audience for this book. This is clearly written for people that are either deep in their schooling for medicine or have already built a career in one field or another related to medicine. With that being said, this book is a fucking slog.
It's written in a profoundly irritating way that seems to be nothing more than hyperbolic statements jammed into sentences structured to fit as many five or more syllable words as possible. This is not to say I need my books to have short punchy sentences with simplistic word usage, but after 200 plus pages of endless sentences stuffed with obnoxiously turgid phrasing it became impossible to not simply rewrite the book in my head as I read it. After a while it stops sounding smart, it stops being interesting to read,and it becomes annoying. I read it in my head in the most pompous voice I could devise.
Worse than the word choices were the aforementioned hyperbolic statements and suggestions. I read through the entire index and references section and I still wasn't put at ease with the extensive and endless assumptions made in this book. It may have been in reference to a certain span of years where its suggested some such ailment of bug had been around for perhaps ten years, but also maybe ten thousand. Or that, in fact, something that was considered to have been a new species was actually a million years old. If it wasn't about that, it was about the amount, or percentage, or people that are afflicted in a given area with whatever disease is being discussed in that chapter. Sometimes it's five percent, but also maybe seventy. There were a few times that it was claimed one hundred percent of people had one sickness or another. That's 100%. As in virtually everyone. None of these claims, be they in a small and believable number or be they the entirety of a population, were given any actual reference or revelation as to where these numbers came from. It was as if they were just tossed out onto the page and since they were surrounded by half a dictionary of bullshit words and Latin phrases they must be taken as truth. That's not really how it works.
There was also a tedious amount of non-information in this book. In every chapter, or 100% of the book, it is declared that "We don't really know", "We haven't figured it out, "It's a mystery", " Research is not completed", etc etc. So I'm reading this book about parasites and bugs and diseases but everything is just up in the air. There are no answers or remedies or cures or anything. I understand medicine is an ever shifting science and new things are discovered every day. But I feel like if someone were to sit down and write a book about a buncha diseases and bugs, they'd at least wanna have an answer or two. Perhaps a solid and well backed suggestion at the least. Not a lot of ramblings about side effects and ailments and dangers and then.....nothing. I am aware of the fact that a lot has changed in the medical world since 1980, when this book was published. I'm sure that a lot of the open-endedness of this book has probably been cleared up by now, and that's all well and good. But the point remains, if you're going to write a book maybe go ahead and have everything you need first.
With all that being said, I won't lie and say I didn't learn anything. Some of the things in here are very interesting, almost fascinating when in reference to culture and history, and I would absolutely never have known any of them if I didn't pick this book up. Some of the allusions and stories were funny enough, and even though this book took me forever to push through it is blessedly short.
Like I said, I am not the target audience for this book. I get that and I respect that fact. I am sure there are plenty of people for which this book is intended that got a helluva lot more out of it then I did. But that doesn't change the flaws in the book that go beyond the subject matter. I certainly wouldn't recommend this book to anyone, but hey, I'm no doctor.