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Devil's Flu: The World's Deadliest Influenza Epidemic and the Scientific Hunt for the Virus That Caused It

Devil's Flu: The World's Deadliest Influenza Epidemic and the Scientific Hunt for the Virus That Caused It

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Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Good facts, lousy characterization
Review: All in all an interesting read, however there is little in the way of actual history and anecdotes about this 'forgotten epidemic' - The book focuses far more on the modern day hunt for the virus than any sort of historical examination of what happened during the epidemic. An interesting read, however, people interested solely a historical examination of the virus should probably look elsewhere.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A pox on all our houses
Review: The HIV epidemic has been called the deadliest scourge ever to hit mankind, and so it may prove to be in the decades to come as the body count piles up. What is astonishing is that the world seems to have forgotten what was, before AIDS, the most lethal infection ever to visit the world, just 85 years ago -- the Spanish Flu epidemic of 1918. It came seemingly out of nowhere and spread all over the planet, reaching into its remotest corners, and left 30 million people dead in its wake. The spread was helped enormously by troop movements in the First World War. What made this flu so frightening was the speed with which it killed; there were reports of people leaving for work feeling fine, and dropping dead before they reached the office.

Davies' book holds our attention while he is describing the flu epidemic and its effects on the patients and survivors; where the book bogs down is in the chapters on the search for what caused it. A more detailed historical examination of the impact the flu had on the world in various countries and societies would have made it a more interesting book. Davies writes well, and his warning that the flu merits more respect than being just an annoying annual pest needs to be taken seriously. He makes a good case that a return of a devastating flu virus is not a matter of if but of when, and this time around its spread will be immeasurably aided by jet travel. As Davies points out, as lethal as the AIDS epidemic has been, and will continue to be, one can, with good luck and common sense, avoid being infected with HIV; but in the event of a return of a killer flu, how can you stop breathing?

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A pox on all our houses
Review: The HIV epidemic has been called the deadliest scourge ever to hit mankind, and so it may prove to be in the decades to come as the body count piles up. What is astonishing is that the world seems to have forgotten what was, before AIDS, the most lethal infection ever to visit the world, just 85 years ago -- the Spanish Flu epidemic of 1918. It came seemingly out of nowhere and spread all over the planet, reaching into its remotest corners, and left 30 million people dead in its wake. The spread was helped enormously by troop movements in the First World War. What made this flu so frightening was the speed with which it killed; there were reports of people leaving for work feeling fine, and dropping dead before they reached the office.

Davies' book holds our attention while he is describing the flu epidemic and its effects on the patients and survivors; where the book bogs down is in the chapters on the search for what caused it. A more detailed historical examination of the impact the flu had on the world in various countries and societies would have made it a more interesting book. Davies writes well, and his warning that the flu merits more respect than being just an annoying annual pest needs to be taken seriously. He makes a good case that a return of a devastating flu virus is not a matter of if but of when, and this time around its spread will be immeasurably aided by jet travel. As Davies points out, as lethal as the AIDS epidemic has been, and will continue to be, one can, with good luck and common sense, avoid being infected with HIV; but in the event of a return of a killer flu, how can you stop breathing?

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Why a Duck?
Review: This is a book for technical readers as well as a nice history of flu epidemics, especially the one in 1918 that killed 30-40 million and the Hong Kong 1997 avian flu which had the potential to claim 100 million lives. As long as flu's have been around, there haven't been a lot of books written on it and publishers even turned away authors seeking to document the Influenza Epidemic of 1918 - 19 simply 'because it was over'.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A look at a re-emerging lethal threat...
Review: While researching FINAL EPIDEMIC, my novel of the re-emergence of the Spanish Flu of 1918,I was fortunate enough to have one of the epidemeologists I used as a source send me Pete Davies' book in its original British title (it was issued in 1999 in England under the title: "Catching Cold.")

Then as now, the depth of Davies' own research into both the history and the contemporary study of the H1N1 killer flu virus is as impressive as it is extensive. THE DEVIL'S FLU ranks with the best of medical non-fiction narrative on this unfortunately again-timely subject.

A startling fact about the original 1918 plague that devastated humanity --notable, since it occurred within the lifespan of many still alive today-- is the collective amnesia that so often surrounds that event.

Few Americans realize that it's extremely probable that they have a family member only a generation or two ago who fell prey to the deadly Spanish Flu pandemic; tales of when the cry "bring out your dead!" echoed along American streets were seldom passed from those who witnessed it to those of us who descended from the survivors. It takes a trip to virtually any cemetery to bring the death toll home to us, as marker after marker identifies the victims of the 1918 flu pandemic. Worldwide, deaths in 1918-1919 totalled at least 40 million humans, and very likely as many as 100 million-- all within a timespan measured in months.

As I write this, an avian influenza virus not unlike that which triggered the 1918 pandemic, if forcing the mass slaughter of chickens and other birds throughout Asia. It is an attempt to forestall the very real possibility that the virus (which already has infected human victims through bird-to-human transmission, and currently has a 70 percent mortality rate among human victims) could acquire genes which would allow for human-to-human transmission.

During research for FINAL EPIDEMIC, I interviewed dozens of medical researchers and epidemeologists. Without exception, each stated that their greatest fear was a resurgence of a influenza virus similar to the 1918 variant, which through incubation in humans mutated into a unprecedented killer of humanity. Based on the cyclic nature of flu pandemics, I was told, mankind was already overdue-- and, worse: woefully unprepared-- for such an emerging viral Shiva.

Influenza was, and remains, a universal threat: As A.W. Crosby wrote in "America's Forgotten Pandemic," his own classic examination of the 1918 Spanish Flu, "I know how not to get AIDS. I don't know how not to get the flu."

Davies' book on this reemerging threat deserves attention, as he reminds us that this kind of horrific killer virus is considered by the medical community a certainity to arise again.
At best, we can only prepare ourselves -- and wait.

--Earl Merkel
Author, FINAL EPIDEMIC (PenguinPutnam 2002)
and DIRTY FIRE (PenguinPutnam 2003)


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