![]() | By: Gina Kolata Binding: Paperback Publisher: Touchstone Books,U.S. ISBN: 0743203984 ISBN-13: 9780743203982 Released: 01 Jan 2001 RRP: Average Rating: ![]() |

This book tells the tale of that last great pandemic, & the subsequent search to identify the virus, to see to it that the disease never returns. Among the biggest events that it covers are the plague year of 1918, the Swine Flu fiasco of 1976, & the 1997 race to stop the spread of a deadly avian flu that was spreading in Hong Kong.
I found this book to be nothing short of gripping! I had read several references to the 1918 flu, but have never reallly understood the matter. Indeed, the author's treatment of the 1976 Swine Flu & 1997 Hong Kong chicken flu (both of which I do remember) made a number of things suddenly come quite clear.
I deeply enjoyed reading this book, & give it my highest recommendation. If you want to read a gripping whodunit, or a medical-type history book, or want to under current events pertaining to diseases, then I strongly suggest that you read this book!

There was one aspect of FLU that I did find notable, & that was a hint of gender bias on the part of the author towards the book's three principal "heroes": Dr. Johan Hultin, Dr. Jeffery Taubenberger, & Dr. Kirsty Duncan. All three attempted to recover the 1918 virus from the lung tissue of victims that died from the disease. Hultin, a San Francisco pathologist, went looking for corpses of Eskimos buried in the Alaskan permafrost. Duncan, a geographer by profession, organized the exhumation of dead miners buried at Spitzbergen, Norway. Taubenberger, an MD/PhD researcher with the U.S. Armed Forces Institute of Pathology, went rummaging among tissue samples preserved in paraffin blocks stored for decades at the institute. Kolata admiringly described the professional pedigrees & accomplishments of both Hultin & Taubenberger, but virtuallly ignored Duncan, except to infer that her "long hair & doe eyes & raw emotions" may have had an unsettling effect on the marriage of one of her team members. Oh, & that Duncan's own marriage broke up. (Was this relevant? Who cares?) Moreover, images of Hultin & Taubenberger hard at work are featured in the volume's too paltry section of photographs, but not Duncan. And, in the "Acknowledgements", the author thanks Hultin & Taubenberger for their "extraordinary assistance", but no gratitude, however lukewarm, is awarded Duncan. Do I perceive some cattiness here? Meow!
I found FLU marginallly interesting, but it in no way met expectations. I wouldn't recommend buying it unless you're obsessed with the subject matter.
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