Pages 11--16 begin with detail of the brain study presented at Vienna Psychiatric Society by Dr. Von Economo whose theory would be considered and 70 years went by before "advanced medicine" proved his theory correct. Dr. Cruchet a French physician and pathologist met with an unknown soldier from the battle of Verdun and was struck by unusual symptoms which he wondered might have been after effects of mustard gas or another chemical weapon. Cruchet would go on to see 64 more similar cases , some with fever, some without, most had headache and nausea, strangest of all to him was the excessive amount of tine all these soldiers spent sleeping. The soldiers were not comatose but simply asleep. Pg 19, in 1918 doctors were preoccupied with the epidemic of influenza worldwide which would kill between 20-100 million worldwide. The sleeping sickness had to take a backseat to medicine's research into curing the influenza that swept the globe. Pg 25 details how the symptoms began to change as the sleeping sickness spread. The history of medicine documented through this work is a good reference to the times of that era and mentions that in the 1920's the decade of rapid technological changes began. (pg. 84). Josephine B Neal was a bacteriologist and neurologist who led the Matheson Commission. She was born and raised in Maine she had been a school teacher but applied for medical school. (Pages 162--165) She was considered an expert on polio and was one of the first people to be injected with the anti polio vaccine in New York in 1934, the results of the trials were kept out of the media and the vaccine campaign stopped until renewed in the 1950's by Dr. Jonas Salk. Chapter 19 details Josephine's pioneering involvement as a woman in medical research in New York where she lived. The sleeping epidemic diminished but the book leaves one wondering if it might not return with different symptoms. I give this book a 5 ***** and will share it with a friend who spent a career at the bench in medical research. I will be interested in her comments.


