Rats, lice and history

being a study in biography, which, after twelve preliminary chapters indispensable for the preparation of the lay reader, deals with the life history of typhus fever ...

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Hans Zinsser: Rats, lice and history (1963, Printed and published for the Atlantic Monthly Press by Little, Brown, and Company)

301 pages

Langue : English

Publié 23 juillet 1963 par Printed and published for the Atlantic Monthly Press by Little, Brown, and Company.

Numéro OCLC :
2452553

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3 étoiles (1 critique)

7 editions

Fascinating as a project, frustrating as a rant

3 étoiles

This 1934 book is a history of typhus presented as popular science (and apparently as a biography, although it doesn't really follow any such form).

The first four chapters are pretty much unreadable. One Stanford University scientist in the 1930s grinds an axe about many different scientists and writers for about 80 pages of text. Once he finishes with this rant, it gets more interesting as he begins a historical exploration of the spread of disease, and in particular how disease and war travelled together.

The writing stays on point mostly, except for a few more veiled jabs at other writers and some questionable classist comments that are troubling even for that time (a 'humerous' anecdote about having the police arrest a homeless non-white man so that he could gather lice from him sticks out in my mind). The fascinating two chapters on lice are by far the best of …

Sujets

  • Typhus fever
  • Epidemics -- History
  • Lice
  • Rats as carriers of disease