Smells can make you fall in love. Parasites can make you crazy. Faith is in the genes. There are fires burning inside your cells and lies flaming in your thymus.... Intensely personal and brilliantly scientific, Faith, Madness, and Spontaneous Human Combustion reveals the startling ways in which science -- especially immunology and pathology -- shapes our destinies, and how something as intimate as our own identities can be connected to the intricate workings of the machines known as our bodies.
Probably the most poetic way that one could learn a few facts about immunology.
There is something I enjoy about this book that is hard for me to nail down. It’s a messy mix of science, stories, and philosophizing from the author cobbled together in a way that is organic. It feels something like a conversation about nothing in particular, but you end feeling like you know each other better.
It’s not quite a page turner, but the author’s use of imagery will certainly make reading it worthwhile
As a professor who teaches immunology, I found this book very unusual as it relates to the field of immunology. I have read the book twice not because I particularly enjoyed it but because I wanted to make sure I was not missing some of the connections he was trying to make in his essays. The book is essentially a collection of essays in which he takes an immunological topic such as immunological memory, foreignness, self recognition, etc and relates that to human experience. That is, he tries to show, for example, how immunological memory is similar to memories we have stored in our minds. It is not always easy to see what connection he is trying to make because he jumps back and forth from the human mind to the immune system. In fact, there is more poetic, word-play about the human condition than there is about immunology throughout the book. It appears that immunology is just a weak frame-work around which he can discuss topics in human experience and perception. Nevertheless, there are some unique connections that he presents that made it a worthwhile read for a professor looking for a different way of looking at the immune system.
DNFed a little over halfway but still believe it enough to qualify a review.
This book's premise was highly intriguing to me, that of the centrality of the immune system across a plethora of domains, including that of self identity.
While Callahan does present some interesting hypotheses throughout the book, reading it feels like listening to some messiah figure spewing psueudo-intellectual gospel. This presented much less as a science book, feeling rather like a strange memoir mixed with absurd stories and wild hypotheses.
Unfortunately, not the book I was looking for in the end.
One of my favorite books so far, this work by Immunologist and English professor is a collection of essays woven together that explore how our immune system makes us unique, protects us, and leads to events and conditions which are a miracle of biology and humanity. He uses personal narratives and other stories to illustrate the science, and weaves several threads throughout in poetic and captivating language. My book club LOVED this one!
Found this in a used book store's tiny science section, bought it because the title captivated me. For a Ph.D and a scientist, he's a phenomenal writer; much like Loren Eiseley was, if you're familiar with him (if not, check out The Unexpected Universe). This book deals a lot with the immune system (it's subtitle is "What Immunology Can Teach Us About Self-perception"), which according to the author is the part of our biology that defines the self; but being about selfhood, it goes back and forth between science/medicine and psychology and philosophy. Almost poetic throughout and in many places incredibly profound, this book of essays (which run together along a common theme) blew my mind more than once. A great blend of science, philosophy and simple, honest humanness. Read it.
This book is about the human immune system, which is more fascinating than I had realized. Some of the information the author presents is really amazing.
The trouble is that he loves making analogies and comparisons and poetic references to other things in a way that is rather confusing. For instance, in the chapter in which he describes the way that the immune system "remembers" what illnesses you've had before, he also describes tricks the memory plays, as when he thinks he sees a long-dead lover in a coffee shop. Is he really saying that there is a link between these two things? I can't tell ... and with science writing I think you have to be really clear.
A good read for stretching a mind constricted from reading textbooks. Here's an example: The immune system isn't part of the brain. The brain is part of the immune system. Mind is an arm raised against things too large to be destroyed by antibodies and cytotoxic T lymphocytes, the microscopic weapons of the immune system. The immune system is for plague, tuleramia, toxoplasmosis, measles, mumps, and chicken pox. Mind is for bears, coral snakes, sharks, snapping turtles, wife beaters, and Buicks.
All I really have to say is... wow. And if you have an interest in just about anything + good writing and insight into not only how your body works, but how a lot of the world gets along as well... then this is a must read.
Not all of the essays in this book impressed me equally. Some were merely good, but others were jaw-droppingly outstanding. He's as much an essayist as a man of science, and he gave me new perspectives on both immunology and the mysteries of life.
This started out with a really interesting premise, but some of the essays were kind of cool and interesting, and some just wandered without coming to much of a conclusion. A lot of the creative writing bogged down instead of enhancing the text.