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It All Started with Hippocrates

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Medical Studies

134 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1966

87 people want to read

About the author

Richard Armour

150 books38 followers
Richard Armour, a college professor of English who specialized in Chaucer and the English Romantic poets, was best known as a prolific author of light verse and wacky parodies of academic scholarship. He was a professor of English at Scripps College in Claremont from 1945 to 1966.

Armour was raised in Pomona, California, where his father owned a drugstore. He graduated from Pomona College, where he was elected to Phi Beta Kappa, then obtained his master's and Ph.D. in English literature at Harvard. He was a Harvard research fellow at the Victoria and Albert Museum library in London.

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5 stars
20 (35%)
4 stars
21 (36%)
3 stars
11 (19%)
2 stars
4 (7%)
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1 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Karthik.
145 reviews5 followers
August 18, 2016
It's a day's read, and reads easy. Lots of wordplay humor but the fruits of it are reaped as at a farmer's market, the whole cart is on display but it varies from the downright unpalatable to the exquisite kind you feel fortunate to even taste! The rating I have given it is some hint as to how patiently you wait for the good lines. However, I will still pick up another book by this author for idle day's light reading.
Profile Image for Holly.
696 reviews
June 2, 2022
My dad loved Richard Armour and had most if not all of his books, and I read every last one in the house when I was in high school. I came across this again recently and decided to reread it. I didn't care for it much. I don't know if the problem is that the text hasn't aged well, or if I lacked the sophistication as a high school student to see how mediocre this is, or a combination thereof, but meh. Maybe the satire that draws more on Armour's expertise--Twisted Tales from Shakespeare, maybe--will still be funny to me.
Profile Image for Sarah Rigg.
1,673 reviews22 followers
August 23, 2019
Humor books for adults were my jam when I was a young teen. I remember thinking "Dave Barry Slept Here" was hilarious, for instance. This is in the same vein, a humorous book about the history of medicine.
983 reviews5 followers
February 15, 2023
Although I enjoy Richard Armour's wacky, pun-ridden humour, "Hippocrates" seemed a bit tired out after "It all Started with Eve" or "The Classics Reclassified". Not really his best, but nevertheless a hilarious and very evil journey of medical history and miracles.
Profile Image for Moonkiszt.
3,004 reviews333 followers
March 15, 2019
Into medicine? Hypochondriac? It's all good. . . .start here.
65 reviews
April 11, 2022
Every now and then there's a chuckle. I'm sure medical students and doctors would enjoy it. I thought it was fine. Super light and easy to read. Maybe I learned something. I can't remember.
1,211 reviews20 followers
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April 12, 2009
It doesn't really matter which of Armour's books you pick up first--I picked this one because it was one of my favorites. I especially like the footnotes in these books--for example, in a discussion of splitting rocks with vinegar in one book, Armour comments 'Vinegar was a high explosive in Hannibal's time, but not before or since.'
Profile Image for Rae.
3,950 reviews
May 7, 2008
A very funny and warped version of the history of medicine by the classic humorist.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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