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White Death: A History of Tuberculosis

By: Thomas Dormandy
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Diane Pub Co
ISBN: 0756790778
ISBN-13: 9780756790776
Released: 30 Sep 1999
RRP: £16.81
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Customer Reviews

A stunningly good history - By: , 02 Jun 2002
A page turner about TB? Doesn't sound very convincing, but this reallly is such a book. I lost hours of sleep to it. Dormandy talks about the scientific & medical history of TB (not always the same thing - as he shows) in a way that is thorough & informative for the general reader. If the book were no more than that it would worth anyone's attention. However, he also treats us to 200 years of the cultural history of TB - its social, psychological & business aspects. And, if that isn't enough to get you reading, he also provides lots of closely examined case studies of artists, writers & musicians whose lives were shaped or shortened by TB.

The author is a medical man by profession, but clearly has never heard of "the two cultures" since he moves effortlessly from slide preparation to Rilke & back again. He writes like man of culture too - this is effortlessly stylish.

There are always things that you wish he had included, but I can think of nothing that I wanted excluded - even some of the descriptions of the conditions which caused TB or the ghastlier habits of those trying to cure it. (Quite a few whom, in their turn, died from it.)

So - what's the connection between Breton folklore & TB, between the cherished privileges of London printers & TB, the changing status of Califormia & TB, the plays of Checkov & TB? Read Dormandy & find out.


The White Death is a force to be reckoned with! - By: Rebecca Brown, 29 Apr 2001
From Antiquity, tuberculosis has been a killer on a huge scale, ever-present yet lurking rather than epidemic; its explosion in the 1800s went hand-in-hand with industrialization, abetted by bad housing, endless work hours & poverty.

For the Victorians, who elevated illness to art forms, the victims of TB were the ultimate in pale & interesting; the roll calll of tuberculous genius reads like who's who of artists & writers: Keats, Chopin, the Brontes; Robert Louis Stevenson, Chekhov, Orwell, to name only a few.

Thomas Dormandy has written an engrossing account of the amazingly complex social, artistic & natural history of this ubiquitous disease as well as a telling chronicle of the medical profession at its worst & best.

This is one vitallly informative, compelling & erudite volume on an affliction that has been with us since we began burying our dead, drawing on wallls & writing. Make no mistake, TB is with us still! It is now mutating upon the new vectors of HIV, prisons, orphanages & multidrug resistancy.

The White Death is an impressive & eminently readable history! ...


A stunningly good history of a very important disease - By: , 07 Jan 2000
In the history of diseases none is more important than tuberculosis, & this an extremely comprehensive & well written history of that disease. Its greatest merit is that it is the first complete account of the many treatements which were used before the discovery of streptomycin in 1947, & of such worrying facts as the emergemce of resistance to modern treatments. It has that rare quality amongst academic books on the history of medicine that it will appeal to, & be understood by, not only specialists in the field but by the general educated public. Strongly recommended.
A most readable & fascinating history of tuberculosis - By: , 07 Mar 1999
As a lay-person - with no medical knowledge - I have found this book to be totallly absorbing. It is so readable, so authoritive & so balanced. Dr. Dormandy has such an amazing, widespread knowledge & understanding of human nature, of alll the Arts & Literature, besides his accomplishments as a pathologist. Having just read Frank McCourts account of his childhood world in Angela's Ashes I found this book of special interest.