Because I enjoyed her "Great Pearl Heist" and I prefer nonfiction I wanted to read another of her books. Asleep showed up on recommendations for me based on my preferences and I read this in March 2014. I was not disappointed although it is different than the Pearl Heist, it is intriguing and an account of the 1918--1927 sleeping illness plague that became the forgotten world wide epidemic. I had not known nor read of this before so found the account fascinating. Published in March 2010 by Berkley it is only 229 pages but reading on various case studies world wide of those who have this sleeping sickness, some die, some survive and some are confined to institutions. Doctors still do not know what causes this condition diagnosed as encephalitis lethargica.
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.
My book blog created 2012 books I read & review. Separated my readings from mu writings on my other blog, Pat's Posts. . Eventually I may display my entire library here.(2024 April update still evolving collections, much to do) I have moved some reviews from the other blog to here. Design of this blog is a work in progress, in 2023 WTH my photos all disappeared. I have not yet replaced them. (Bizarre Google Blogger)...
MY OTHER BLOG
If you got here because I commented and you were directed to this blog, it is because Blogger will not show both blogs. So you can get to my Pat's Posts, by clicking this link..my miscellany, the first blog while this is just about books.
Saturday, September 6, 2014
Tuesday, September 2, 2014
Tisha BY/as told to Robert Specht
Tisha is the true adventure love story of Anne Hobbs, who at 19 years of age in 1927 ventures to Alaska to teach school. It is her memoir as told to Robert Specht. After we spent weeks in Alaska last year I have a very deep appreciation of it's natives and history and cannot read enough about it. I was browsing in the Goodwill book section and had a conversation with another woman who is also a self confessed reader junkie, she spotted this book, paperback, published by Bantam Books in March 1977 on the very low priced bargain shelf and handed it to me declaring it one of the best books she had ever read. I had told her I am fond of history and memoirs and prefer non-fiction. I recognized this book from our Alaskan trip as one I considered buying while there but did not because I had a box full already to ship home. I snatched it up. At first I thought Tisha was an Indian name but learned it was the way the Alaskan Indians pronounced "teacher" and the name that stuck with her.
The first sentence transported me immediately to the wild country of Alaska and this frontier, places we visited that preserve the same structures as the gold rush times and before--Eagle, Chicken, Dawson, deep Yukon territory and the vastness of the land and reawakened my appreciation for those who ventured there way back then. Anne begins, "I have lived in the Forty Mile country of Alaska for a long time, but even now, every so often when I'm out rock-hunting or looking for fossils< I get lost." It was not an easy life and had Anne not been venturous and head strong she would not have made it and lived to tell, it was not a time for timid or weak people but for survivors. It begins September 4, 1927, "Even though it was barely eight o'clock and the sun had just come up, practically the whole crew of Eagle had turned out to see the pack train off. ...Mrs Rooney tells Ann, One thing you'll learn is that it doesn't take much to collect a crowd in Alaska..."
It's only 342 pages but likely out of print now, although it is a current seller in Alaskan bookstores and the Yukon territory today, I agree that the book is wonderful and give it 5 *****. It's a keeper.
The first sentence transported me immediately to the wild country of Alaska and this frontier, places we visited that preserve the same structures as the gold rush times and before--Eagle, Chicken, Dawson, deep Yukon territory and the vastness of the land and reawakened my appreciation for those who ventured there way back then. Anne begins, "I have lived in the Forty Mile country of Alaska for a long time, but even now, every so often when I'm out rock-hunting or looking for fossils< I get lost." It was not an easy life and had Anne not been venturous and head strong she would not have made it and lived to tell, it was not a time for timid or weak people but for survivors. It begins September 4, 1927, "Even though it was barely eight o'clock and the sun had just come up, practically the whole crew of Eagle had turned out to see the pack train off. ...Mrs Rooney tells Ann, One thing you'll learn is that it doesn't take much to collect a crowd in Alaska..."
It's only 342 pages but likely out of print now, although it is a current seller in Alaskan bookstores and the Yukon territory today, I agree that the book is wonderful and give it 5 *****. It's a keeper.
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