Covering some of humankind's most notorious diseases, this book describes, with individual examples, the changing historical relationships between humans and their diseases, many of which they have helped to create. Contemporary illustrations show how the diseases were perceived in the past.
As humans have 'progressed', we have also unwittingly created more opportunities for microbes to kill us in more cunning ways. Mother Nature's way to ensure the race of man doesn't wipe out the earth. The prehistoric hunter-gatherer groups forestalled epidemics by movement and fewer children, but when mankind figured out agriculture and the domestication of livestock, the tables were turned. Loss of tree foliage means more places for mosquitoes to breed. Loss of habitat brings wildlife closer to our homes.
This book focuses on the diseases which have bedeviled homo sapiens during recorded history. It specifically warns us that we are running out of time by showing how previous outbreaks were caused by human avarice. For example, Yellow Fever is not a threatening form in the jungle. However, once it is transported outside its safe environment, it is an entirely different being. It remains known as the American Plague because it caused so many deaths in the States and the Caribbean, but it was transported to the colonies via the African slave trade, a hefty price paid for cheap labour.
The "minor" diseases are included here, too, such as rickets. Caused by a deficiency of Vitamin D, it is thought that Northern Europeans were able to become lactose-tolerant via Darwinian selection to compensate for the lack of sunlight in the northern climes.
It's all very intriguing. Alas, I now feel that every ache and pain is something more serious than it probably is. Or perhaps one of us harbors the next bug that is set to wipe out mankind. Eenie-meenie-miney-mo.
I read this book around 2000 and reviewed it again December 2008. It's an interesting, if somewhat morbid, book. The book is oversize and covers 176 pages, heavy with excellent illustrations.
Kiple uses light and straight-forward prose. The writing is not too technical and aimed at the general public. A worthwhile read for interest for a good sense of history, a side less told.