Rating: Summary: Entering the "Hot Zone" Review: It starts with a simple headache. Then maybe you get a nosebleed. After a few days, you know you are extremely sick. The lining of your stomach and the top layer of your tongue literally fall off. Your organs turn into mush. Excessive bleeding from every natural opening in your body occurs. And since your blood can't clot, the bleeding won't stop. Black vomit mixed with blood gushes from your mouth. Then, you die painfully with a mask-like expression on your face.This doesn't even sound like it could exist, does it? Well it does. It is death by a virus known as Ebola. It is especially contagious in monkeys and can jump species over to humans. The Hot Zone, by Richard Preston, describes outbreaks of this and other "hot" viruses in locations around the world, including a city near Washington, D.C. Virus experts in the Army need to unravel the Ebola mystery and try to protect the public from this vicious disease. Preston has taken a true story and unveiled its horror. I couldn't believe how descriptive his writing is. If you want to read a true modern day thriller, then this is an awesome pick. I highly recommend it and am looking forward to reading more from Richard Preston.
Rating: Summary: A Gripping, True, Horror Story Review: Preston's true-story accounts of lethal viruses that spread like wildfire, invade, infect, and liquefy the guts of their human hosts read unbelievably--like sci-fi. But it is non-fiction, and is based on his in-depth interviews with characters named in the book. Let the reader be warned: Grisly descriptions of the effects of the viruses Marburg and Ebola on humans are graphic. I was repulsed by some passages, yet totally riveted--I simply could not put the book down. The information is timely, since the federal public health agencies recently told public health agencies to be on the alert for "unusual disease patterns associated with today's events", and our nation has been put on bio-alert. This book will undoubtedly increase your anxiety index, but it will also expand your awareness of the nature of lethal viruses and make you realize how vulnerable, helpless, and underprepared we are to deal with agents for which there are no vaccines and no cure, agents that mutate, jump species, replicate, and spread around the world, burning hot in their host--the human population.
Rating: Summary: Superb Suspense Thriller...and it's TRUE! Review: I just finished reading this amazing work by Richard Preston for the second time. It was just as thrilling, just as suspenseful, just as terrifying as I remembered. Beginning with a man's descent into the hell of ebola virus, Preston grabs you by the collar and shakes you to the core with his description of the ever increasing physical effects. Preston pulls you along as scientists from all over the world track Ebola and its many strains, watching people die horribly and totally helpless to make a difference. One of the most horrifying passages describes a very brave physician who chooses to stay with a group of patients in a hut in Africa -- to hopefully ease their way to death. While giving an injection to one of his patients, she has a seizure, the hypodermic -- tainted with her blood -- is free and flying and ends up stabbed into the meat of his thumb. The next few days of his life are pure torture -- waiting for the virus to begin desolving his insides into jello. By some miracle, the the patient suddenly recovered and it is discovered that she was suffering from malaria, not ebola. How would that change your life...dodging a bullet with the word EBOLA chiseled into it. Also fascinating are Preston's comparisons between Ebola and AIDS. Ebola kills in DAYS, therefore, outbreaks were treated with aggressive containment methods. AIDS, of course, works more slowly, so fewer people pay attention. Thus our world wide epidemic. If you are a horror, sci-fi, hard science, mystery, non-fiction or military writing fan -- or all of the above at once -- you will love this book. The phrase "page-turner" was made for Richard Preston's book, "The Hot Zone."
Rating: Summary: Good God This Book Is Terrifying!!!!!! Review: Come now, what could possibly be more terrifying than a deadly virus which kills 9 of 10 people? Nothing, huh? Oh wait, yeah I forgot ... it's just outside Washington DC. And oh yeah ... you throw up blood, your organs liquify while you're still alive and you leak blood from your nose, eyes, mouth, anus, etc, until you fall down, have a few seizures, spraying blood everywhere, and leaving yourself a bag of liquified liver, intestine, and brain, all sitting in a pool of blood. And did I mention this entire book is nonfiction? Gruesome, horrifying, and absolutly wonderful, this book is!!!!! It's a quick read, so you have no excuse not to read it. But I would recogmend not reading it in class ... you will make some odd faces at the gory descriptions provided by Preston. The novel takes you through the entire history of the virus, (the plot is not just "Oh my God there's an outbreak!!!!!!!"). You'll read it and be obsessed with Ebola for at least a week ... its an incredibly memorable book, and you'll love it, don't worry.
Rating: Summary: Unworldly Occurence Review: It is extremely difficult to believe that a highly infectious and deadly virus from deep with in the rainforests of central Africa could find its way to a suburban environment in Washington D.C. The virus is known as the lethal Ebola virus that has terrorized Africa since the virus's first appearance in the year of 1980. Ebola is capable of killing ninety percent of it's victims with in the period of a few days and depending on which strain the victim has obtained, it can be lethal in nine out of ten cases. In the United States Ebola first appeared at a monkey house in Reston Washington, a monkey house is a place where monkeys are imported to first within the United States before they are sold. At first a few monkeys began to mysteriously die , but the situation quickly became much more complicated as many more of the monkeys met their deaths and as scientist discovered Ebola strains with in the monkeys blood samples. The army medical team, known as USAMRIID, and the CDC, which is an agency that deals with deadly viruses, quickly became involved in the situation and set the goal of wiping out the potentially dangerous virus by means of decontamination through a Biohazard operation. The two teams began work immediately by isolating the virus and setting up a plan to sterilize the monkey house by putting every monkey in the house to death by means of lethal injection. The operation was an eventual success as the entire location was exterminated of the Ebola strain without a single human casualty, yet the biggest battle was keeping the operation classified and away from the mass media. The Ebola strain in Reston was eventually given it's own name as scientists discovered that in fact it was an individual strain different from the others. Currently there is no cure for the Ebola virus and it's ultimate effect on the human population is still unknown. Preston takes the reader from the dark caves of Africa to the cities of central Africa and then to the United States face to face with the devious killer. The terrifying truth of Richard Preston's The Hot Zone, creates an unforgettable experience for any reader. After reading the first chapter of the novel I was instantly hooked, as it became increasingly difficult to end my reading for the day. The horrifying description of the character Charles Monet in his dying state was enough to give me a feeling of uneasiness in my stomach," He brings up an incredible amount of blood from his stomach and spills it on to the floor with a gasping groan."(23-24) Preston brings the reader into the dangerous world of Bio-hazard operations and viral studies. The Hot Zone truly sets itself apart from any other non-fiction or fiction novel due to it's gruesome images given by the author, and the feeling of fear and paranoia it tends to leave it's reader with. Preston's novel of the virus that makes AIDS seem like a play toy is much more terrifying than any non-fiction thriller that I have ever read. After staying up into the late hours to finish a chapter one can find it difficult to enjoy a normal night of sleep with out the feeling of fear and discomfort haunting them throughout the night. Despite the constant terror experienced throughout the book many heroes are also noticeable in the unusual situation that help to ease the readers uneasy feelings. These doctors and scientists who risked their lives and families in the battle against Ebola are often described and portrayed as heroes in the many confrontations with the virus as they set out in an all out battle against Ebola in the suburbs of Washington D.C. Overall The Hot Zone unquestionably deserves the highest rating a book is capable of. The novel has every aspect a well written book of it's genre should have: an unforgettable plot, extreme suspense, and terrifying truth. Preston's novel is in a class of its own, there is no other non-fiction piece of literature that is comparable to his unworldly descriptions and accounts of terror that can be discovered within The Hot Zone's pages. I have never read a book in my previous years that have had such an effect on me as The Hot Zone has. The weeks that I spent indulged in the novel also made me obsessed with obtaining more information about Ebola and its current state. As a result of reading Preston's novel any human can experience how fragile our race is and the constant danger that we face every day. This book on a true life experience does in fact create an unforgettable encounter by the use of its authentic content. Upon completing this book I have had a lasting affect of appreciation for life itself and an understanding of the American nature that nothing "bad" can or will happen in our country. In addition to completing the novel I am still left with one very important question. Can the Ebola virus have as deadly an effect on the world's population as the AIDS epidemic has had or as the Black Plague did in the Medieval era?
Rating: Summary: Unputdownable! Review: I gave this book to my girlfriend and she hasn't stopped reading it. We were at a dinner party and she left early to go home and read the book. You won't regret this read. It is fascinating, horrifying and true.
Rating: Summary: It's So Good!! Review: I borrowed this book from my english teacher. I started to read it, and I found it was really scary. It might be scary, and freaky, but for me it was a page turner. I just couldn't put it down because I wanted to know what happened next. I really enjoyed reading this book. I highly recommend it.
Rating: Summary: The Hot Zone Review: The book, The Hot Zone, is about the African virus Ebola and how it killed a ton of people throughout the 70's and 90's. In the 70's was where it all started and throughout the years it killed a lot of people, but in the 90's scientists slowed down the virus a lot. The American scientists studied, analyzed, and tested the virus out on numerous subjects, mainly monkeys. The subjects that died due to the virus were immediately tested and split open only to reveal body organs that were turned to liquid. The book went into detail the stages of the virus and how it eventually killed the person with it. It was pretty gory because the person would puke out blood mixed with black chunks of their organs. The virus would then eat through everything in the body trying to feed off something new and once the person died, the virus would leave the person in their blood and would exit through every opening in the body. If your one of those readers who loves dramatic type books with a lot of scientific facts then you would love this book. After the beginning of the book it mainly dragged on and talked about scientific evidence about the Ebola virus. To me that was just dull. This book is definitely an adult book. Teenagers or people my age would not find this book very entertaining. Personally, if I were to rate the book out of 5 stars, I would give it 2 and a half. As you can see, this is my review on The Hot Zone I hope it will help you understand what you are getting into if you choose to read it.
Rating: Summary: The Hot Zone Review: The Hot Zone is a suspenseful book based on events that could happen all over the globe. It's about Ebola virus and it starts in the oddest of ways. Through out the book you will have a little trouble picking up the source of the virus but it will keep you entertained trying to solve the mystery in your mind. The book doesn't have a slow point it is steady from front to back. The book takes place in a few small towns in Africa and begins moving around the globe until they start to do things about people trying to leave these small towns. The virus can travel at a very fast rate and is very deadly only a few survivors. Ebola can take only days to kill and often is very painful to the infected. The Hot Zone really gives you a real life perspective on how the virus effects you body physically. In The Hot Zone Ebola is spread in only a couple of ways by blood and by saliva. Although this kind of Ebola that appears in The Hot Zone is not air-born in some real life cases it has been known to be. You start with flue like symptoms then headache begins and you feel dizzy and nausea takes its place. That's when the virus really hits your body many organs will burn and you will not be able to rise from your sleep. The next step of the virus is vomiting uncontrollably and most cases it is blood until you have bleed to death. Many victims in the book died in pools of blood. In my opinion this book kept me interested from beginning to end because the Ebola outbreak already occurred in Africa and it made me understand what they went through. It gets scary thinking that this has happened and could happen again but today's technology is much stronger and the effects wouldn't be as bad. I highly recommend this book because it holds your attention and will keep you reading and thinking of what is to come next. This book is a great book for school reports cause it is filled with so much information about the virus and life in Africa. The Hot Zone is a book you wont forget or put down till your done. I give this book an eight out of ten.
Rating: Summary: So real you wash your hand after reading this book Review: I read this book just because I need information for myself without going to college. This book is about the Ebola virus. Never heard of it? Well, sit down. This book talks about how the virus works, and spreads and how it can wipe out the whole population. How the government has dealt with it in the past and how it is trying to keep everyone safe. I was scared by the time I finished reading it, not because it had happened (people getting sick and bleeding out), and it could again. BECAUSE THIS IS REAL! I couldn't stop washing my hands and wearing bandaids and freaking out about germs for months after reading this.
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