The Ghost Map: The Story of London's Most Terrifying Epidemic--and How It Changed Science, Cities, and the Modern World
by Steven Johnson
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 998)
bookshelves:
london,
medical,
social-issues
Read in January, 2008
By turns thought-provoking and irritating, The Ghost Map meanders from its central story -- how an unorthodox physician found the source of a cholera epidemic that swept through London in 1854 -- into a host of other issues. Expecting a more straightforward account of the unraveling of this medical mystery, I set this book aside twice in frustration, bored with the author's tendency to stretch out the narrative, and particularly his repeated examination of the hold the "miasma parad...more
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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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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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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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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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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 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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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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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
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Read in January, 2008
This is an interesting, though slightly fragmented, telling of an actual cholera outbreak that affected a London neighborhood in the 19th century. I guess it's kind of like an old-school CSI, with the lead character being a scientist who fights against conventional wisdom of how cholera is spread to help put a stop to this outbreak.
This part of the book is very interesting, especially as it discusses the evolution of contemporary health standards and utility systems. (Be forewarned: since c...more
This part of the book is very interesting, especially as it discusses the evolution of contemporary health standards and utility systems. (Be forewarned: since c...more
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Read in March, 2007
recommends it for:
polymaths, urban planners
The book as a whole is a quick, interesting read. It covers the discovery and acceptance of the theory that cholera is waterbourne and seeks to link that to infrastructure changes in London in the mid-19th century, specifically the development of a sewer system.
Johnson's problems are three-fold. Stylistically, he's repetitive. Whole paragraphs could have easily been condensed into single sentences and certain portions of the book paraphrase earlier sections. He also spends too much tim...more
Johnson's problems are three-fold. Stylistically, he's repetitive. Whole paragraphs could have easily been condensed into single sentences and certain portions of the book paraphrase earlier sections. He also spends too much tim...more
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Read in July, 2007
Great read about a historically significant outbreak of cholera in 1850s London. Two different and unrelated men both contribute to our modern understanding of how cholera is transmitted. This book is not just about disease, but also about societies and how people deal with "germs" in a densely populated region. Most interesting to me was the prevailing cholera transmission theory of the time - miasma. Scientists in the 1850s actually believed that all diseases, including cholera, were...more
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Read in May, 2008
A hundred-fifty years ago, give or take, the Soho neighborhood in London is hit by a cholera outbreak. What'd'ya expect when human waste is carted out to the countryside by hand or, more likely, left to accumulate downstairs? Yet, this intestinal bug is no match for the epidemiological prowess of Dr. John Snow and Rev. Henry Whitehead...
That's the premise and the tone of "The Ghost Map," another one of those popular science books that claims all of world history--or at least all of...more
That's the premise and the tone of "The Ghost Map," another one of those popular science books that claims all of world history--or at least all of...more
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I may just start boiling water for the fun of it.
This was a fascinating snapshot of a 19th Century London neighborhood, its inhabitants and its social and economic culture, plus a great intro to some forgotten medical heroes. The most interesting, and perhaps relevant part, is about the scientific community of the day, and their tragically narrow views on public health.
At times, though, the author gets borderline cutesy (it requires a delicate balance to insert sarcasm into a book on c...more
This was a fascinating snapshot of a 19th Century London neighborhood, its inhabitants and its social and economic culture, plus a great intro to some forgotten medical heroes. The most interesting, and perhaps relevant part, is about the scientific community of the day, and their tragically narrow views on public health.
At times, though, the author gets borderline cutesy (it requires a delicate balance to insert sarcasm into a book on c...more
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Read in November, 2007
Ok, so maybe why I found this book so fascinating was because I read it after viewing a museum exhibit in London about the modern metropolis. The biggest problem these super-cities have to face: sanitation! While Johnson does get a bit ahead of himself in the final chapter, it speaks to his point about the Victorian city - London - as a great experiment. And the fact that the modern city is still an experiment in progress. Also, a lot of thoughts here about solving the world's problems with scie...more
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Read in November, 2007
I really enjoyed most of this book. I like history and, call me weird, epidemiology, so this well written account of an 1854 cholera epidemic in London and the men that found the source of transmission is right up my alley. The author's (Steven Johnson) observations of how cities evolved and the problems (including disease) that people encountered in the process were new to me. He used the stories of two of the men instrumental in discovering the source of the epidemic as a demonstration of ho...more
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Has a copy to sell/swap
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Read in February, 2008
While this book is still in process--admittedly, I'm not quite half-way through it--I'd strongly recommend this to people who enjoy reading about epidemiology and the history of urban development. Cholera is not pleasant, and this is not a fiction story (contrary to what some readers seem to think); nonetheless, I'm loving Johnson's detailed account of the biology and the investigators behind London's cholera outbreak of 1854.
ADDENDUM: Sadly, I have to revise my 4-star rating. Johnson's fasc...more
ADDENDUM: Sadly, I have to revise my 4-star rating. Johnson's fasc...more
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Read in August, 2007
I picked this book up initially because it looked interesting, and only after I checked it out did I realize that I had read a previous book by the same author. I had really enjoyed Everything Bad is Good For You, but it seemed like a terribly different book. This seemed more in the style of Erik Larson's Devil in the White City or Simon Winchester's books.
Anyway, Ghost Map is the story of the discovery, in London, of how cholera is transmitted. Discovery is not quite the word; it was more l...more
Anyway, Ghost Map is the story of the discovery, in London, of how cholera is transmitted. Discovery is not quite the word; it was more l...more
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Read in May, 2008
1854 London with a population of 3 million in a 30 mile radius and a new outbreak of cholera - finally through the efforts of a medical doctor and a vicar proof is found that cholera is transmitted by water. But even then, change is slow in coming as those who are in a position to make changes cling to old theories. Doesn't sound very interesting but actually is. Steven Johnson writes alot like Malcolm Gladwell (Blink and Tipping Point) where he manages to connect so many element and time period...more
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