Content: 4 stars. Delivery: 1 star. average 2.5 stars, rounded down.
From the Prologue, "I was sure nobody had written a book called Lives of Great Poisoners, and within a few minutes I was arguing to write Mrs. Pugh's Breakfast Tabel Book.
Well, as a table book, this fails...
"DDT is dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane, which may be more easily read as dichloro-diphenyl-trichloro-ethane (real chemists don't use hyphens, but I find it easier to understand that way)." - p 176... quite a dig at your reader while simultaneously pointing out your snobby chemist attitude.
"The lethal concentration/exposure measure (LCt50) of phosgene is about 3200 mg/min/m3." - p 169
"There are two monochloro or octachloro, ten di or hepta, 14 tri and penta, and 22 tetrachloro dibenzodioxins, one of which, referred to as 2,3,7,8 TCDD, is the nastiest" - p 179
and if you survived the book long enough to reach page, 212, you find this gem, "His 606th trial was on arsphenamine [and aside, I honestly had a Freudian slip where I wrote arse-phenamine] known today as salvarsan, C12H12N2O2As.2HCl.2H2O, or dioxy-diamino-arsenobenzol-dihydochloride."
Yes, this is certainly an easily read "tabletop book" for Mrs. Pugh. (did you note the sarcasm? it's intended).
Oh, not to mention (but I will), the non-fiction book filled with editorials on abortion, capital punishment, and global warming (wherein he constantly references changes in climate over the centuries impacting things like ergot, but only this latest round of overly higher temperatures are human-caused, with no proof... ). None of those editorials belong in a book on Lives of Great Poisoners.
Did I mention the abysmal delivery? He has paragraphs of descriptions of events that might be worthy of Lives of Great Poisoners, but it is so convoluted that it bears several readings to understand (sometimes not) what he is trying to relate. There are dozens of references of "more on this later," but when we return later, he rarely reminds us of the backstory ... the, "oh, this is where we come back from previously mentioned story." Sometimes this is 100 pages later, and we are supposed to recall all the intimate details and someone who has studied and memorized his confusing, but light-hearted, easily read "tabletop book" for Mrs. Pugh.
It could have been so much better.