The Ghost Map: A Street, an Epidemic and the Two Men Who Battled to Save Victorian London
by Steven JohnsonSign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of this book.
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 1678)
Read in April, 2008
On August 28, 1854, working-class Londoner Sarah Lewis emptied a bucket of waste water into the cesspool of her squalid apartment building and triggered the deadliest outbreak of cholera in the city's history. A Victorian city with more than 2 million people packed into a ten-mile circumference. This is the story of two men: Dr. John Snow who pioneered the use of ether as an anesthetic in the United Kingdom, and on a personal note, mentions the first medical use of ether by Dr. William Morton;...more
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Read in March, 2008
I think I can pretty say that this book by Steven Johnson isn't going to be for everybody. It tells the story of how several men tried to cope with and understand a massive outbreak of cholera in London during 1854. Yeah, riveting, right?
Actually, it was. In addition to talking about the disease itself (which basically causes death by diarrhea), the book follows the quest of a London doctor named John Snow as he propels the nascent science of epidemiology into its own. Snow went door to door...more
Actually, it was. In addition to talking about the disease itself (which basically causes death by diarrhea), the book follows the quest of a London doctor named John Snow as he propels the nascent science of epidemiology into its own. Snow went door to door...more
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bookshelves:
non-fiction--history,
non-fiction--science
Read in August, 2008
<img src=http://upload.wikimedia.org/wi...
Broadwick Street showing the John Snow memorial and pub
Snow was a skeptic of the then-dominant miasma theory that stated held that diseases such as cholera or the Black Death were caused by pollution or a noxious form of "bad air". The germ theory was not widely accepted a...more
Broadwick Street showing the John Snow memorial and pub
Snow was a skeptic of the then-dominant miasma theory that stated held that diseases such as cholera or the Black Death were caused by pollution or a noxious form of "bad air". The germ theory was not widely accepted a...more
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bookshelves:
science-maps-mathematics,
to-read
Read in August, 2007
recommends it for:
information theory buffs
If you can get past Johnson's rather nauseatingly detailed descriptions of choleric outbreak and his many accounts of the smells and cesspits of nineteenth century london, The Ghost Map ends up being a very interesting look at how local information and the painstaking research of a few visionaries changed dominant theories about disease and contagation.
Johnson's main focus is the shift in the mid to late nineteenth century from the prejudicial understanding of disease spread through filth an...more
Johnson's main focus is the shift in the mid to late nineteenth century from the prejudicial understanding of disease spread through filth an...more
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bookshelves:
a-z,
library-book,
narrative-nonfiction
recommends it for: Science, Information Design, and Sociology Geeks
Read in July, 2008
recommended to Cindi by:
Author radio interviewrecommends it for: Science, Information Design, and Sociology Geeks
I listened to a radio interview with this author about a year ago and was very intrigued by this book. Steven Johnson was very engaging and I had high expectations for "The Ghost Map: The Story of London's Most Terrifying Epidemic--and How It Changed Science, Cities, and the Modern World." I read "The American Plague: The Untold Story of Yellow Fever, the Epidemic that Shaped Our History" by Molly Caldwell Crosby a few months ago and I think I am glad I did. It gave me a c...more
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I loved this book. The story of how the cholera outbreak in Victorian London spurred the foundation of clinical epidemiology was vaguely familiar to me, but I picked up this book to learn a more comprehensive account of how this happened. While this book did provide that, it went way beyond this singular occurrence to place it in a greater context. This book is really more about what factors, on a macro level, enabled humans came to be city dwellers, the risks inherent in such a progression, ...more
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bookshelves:
history,
nonfiction
Read in September, 2008
recommends it for:
history/psychology buffs
WARNING: Do not read this review if you are squeamish. Or eating.
This book is about cholera, and as a result, the author uses an impressive number of words for shit--including excrement, ordure, human waste, and the Victorian euphemism night soil. And shit, of course.
Johnson explains that a key question in the development of civilization has always been "What are we going to do with all this shit?" This book dramatically improved my vocabulary regarding to...more
This book is about cholera, and as a result, the author uses an impressive number of words for shit--including excrement, ordure, human waste, and the Victorian euphemism night soil. And shit, of course.
Johnson explains that a key question in the development of civilization has always been "What are we going to do with all this shit?" This book dramatically improved my vocabulary regarding to...more
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Read in December, 2007
recommends it for:
Anyone interested in history, diseases, and modern marvels.
I do not recommend this book for its writing -- it is not badly written, for what it is, but reads more like a college thesis or talented essay; dry, clinical, detatched both from its subject and its readers -- but in spite of it.
This is not a story that revolves around characters and plot. In fact, The Ghost Map is not a story at all. It is, instead, a study about the cycles of humanity; of city growth and human death, sewers, water, and disease.
This is a book about cholera: how it ki...more
This is not a story that revolves around characters and plot. In fact, The Ghost Map is not a story at all. It is, instead, a study about the cycles of humanity; of city growth and human death, sewers, water, and disease.
This is a book about cholera: how it ki...more
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reviewed
Read in December, 2007
recommends it for:
All People With Immune Systems
The Ghost Map is among the most engaging pieces of nonfiction I've ever read: a real-life detective story in Victorian London with frighteningly high stakes. During the infancy of modern science, a brilliant doctor and a down-to-earth pastor would join forces and uncover the source of one of the 19th centuries most acute outbreaks of cholera. In doing so, they would effectively create the modern discipline of epidemiology and pioneer modern germ theory.
Author Steven Johnson approaches the ...more
Author Steven Johnson approaches the ...more
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recommends it for: history buffs, map lovers
Read in September, 2008
recommended to Sara* by:
hunter collegerecommends it for: history buffs, map lovers
I really lucked out this semester in my Cities & Health course by getting a chance to read The Ghost Map by Steven Johnson. The book, both a thrilling jaunt into the past and a terrifying look at the possibilities of the future, centers on 1854 London during the city's worst Cholera outbreak. The book follows a unorthodox Doctor, Dr. John Snow, and a man with his ear to the streets, Reverend Henry Whitehead, in the Golden Square neighborhood in Central London. The book chronicles the doctor'...more
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Read in October, 2007
recommends it for:
those curious about Victorian urban sanitation or who enjoy grim tales of disease and death
An interesting read on a grim topic I can appreciate, given my recent state of mind. The majority of the book deals with the 1855 cholera outbreak in London and the two people--John Snow the physician and Henry Whitehead the reverend--who helped tell the tale of the outbreak's origins, and ultimately gave the information that taught the city how to prevent future outbreaks. It was a tough battle fighting the miasmists (the most popular theory for disease spread held that it was the bad air quali...more
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This is fascinating -- I am interested in books/movies about cholera so the story really appealed to me. Some interesting insights in here -- for example -- the solution to lack of clean water supply was to drink alcohol, as it was the closest thing to a "pure" fluid...and this is why Anglos are all drunks...:
"Dying of cirrhosis of the liver in your fourties was better than dying of dysentery in your twenties. To digest large quantities of [alcohol:], you need to boost produ...more
"Dying of cirrhosis of the liver in your fourties was better than dying of dysentery in your twenties. To digest large quantities of [alcohol:], you need to boost produ...more
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read-in-2008
Read in August, 2008
I knew very little about cholera when I started reading this book. I acquired a basic, but thorough, education from it.
The books follows the cholera outbreak in London in 1854, which killed more than 600 people in the Soho area. I was fascinated by the interweaving of medicine and science history, mystery and social sleuthing that the book covers. In setting up the story, Johnson gives us a frank look into life in Victorian times, complete with descriptions of some of the more base jobs of ...more
The books follows the cholera outbreak in London in 1854, which killed more than 600 people in the Soho area. I was fascinated by the interweaving of medicine and science history, mystery and social sleuthing that the book covers. In setting up the story, Johnson gives us a frank look into life in Victorian times, complete with descriptions of some of the more base jobs of ...more
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Read in July, 2008
There was a day a few years ago when not one but TWO people, completely independently of each other, told me they were planning on going into public health. Which is cool. Both of them, however, also said, "I'm really into infectious disease."
Erg.
I'm really not into infectious disease. But I'm into social change and the things that trigger it, and this book was fascinating. (I'm also really into good visual presentation of data, and this book tickles that funny bo...more
Erg.
I'm really not into infectious disease. But I'm into social change and the things that trigger it, and this book was fascinating. (I'm also really into good visual presentation of data, and this book tickles that funny bo...more
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Overall, the style was way too sensationalist and journalistic for me. The author ascribed thoughts and feelings to absolutely everything, especially in the first third of the book. Cities, cesspools, microbes, nameless children, dogs. He knew what they were all feeling, apparently. I understand that its a "literary convention", as the author calls it, but it was taken too far for my tastes. The story itself was actually interesting; I liked the medical history, the personal histories,...more
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Read in July, 2008
recommends it for:
Dickens fans, waifs, and crossing sweepers
It's a bit dry, but it's still a fascinating historical narrative. Provides a look into London's grimy past and the results of rapid urbanization, as well as the current understanding of how cholera spreads. At first, I expected a novel, but it's more research-based and isn't told through a character's perspective.
I agree with the other reviewers who commented on the extended stay in miasma territory. That chapter seemed out of place. I wondered whether it wasn't actually a chapter for...more
I agree with the other reviewers who commented on the extended stay in miasma territory. That chapter seemed out of place. I wondered whether it wasn't actually a chapter for...more
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Read in November, 2007
This was an excellent account of the (successful) efforts of two men, John Snow and Henry Whitehead, to understand the means by which cholera is transmitted, following an 1854 outbreak in London's Soho district. The "ghost map" constructed by Snow, and the identification of the index case by Whitehead, were eventually successful in displacing the prevailing "miasma theory" by establishing linkage beyond reasonable doubt to contamination at a single water pump (the Broad Stree...more
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non-fiction
This fascinating book about the cholera outbreak in London in 1854, and the related discovery of cholera as a waterborne disease would have rated 4 stars if not for two massive flaws. First, the map in question underwent a crucial revision at the time, which included a Voronoi diagram that linked the outbreak to a particular pump based on foot-traffic patterns, and the locations of water pumps throughout the affected neighborhoods. Though the text notes the critical importance of Snow's Voronoi ...more
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Read in March, 2007
The Ghost Map is a fascinating and well written reconstruction of London's cholera outbreak of 1854, the deadliest cholera outbreak the industrial city had seen. Johnson finds interesting ways to tie together many influences and examples of science and culture — quoting Charles Dickens, for example, for rich detail on Victorian London — to tell the brief but fascinating story of John Snow's multi-pronged research of cholera, and the titular outbreak map, one of the key illustrations of compi...more
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bookshelves:
history,
non-fiction
Read in February, 2008
A nicely researched look at London's cholera outbreaks, their causes, and the effort to modernize the city's water and sewage systems in the mid-1800's.
Johnson's main focus is on Dr. Snow, the physician and researcher who devoted enormous effort to proving cholera is transmitted via contaminated water, not by malodorous air. The details of his work are remarkable: sociology, physiology, and cartography were all required to substantiate his theory.
A stronger editor would have been a consi...more
Johnson's main focus is on Dr. Snow, the physician and researcher who devoted enormous effort to proving cholera is transmitted via contaminated water, not by malodorous air. The details of his work are remarkable: sociology, physiology, and cartography were all required to substantiate his theory.
A stronger editor would have been a consi...more























