| View Larger Image | Infection: The Uninvited Universe | Hardcoverby Ph.D. Gerald N. Callahan (Author)
| List Price: | $24.95 | |
| | Binding: | Hardcover | | Publisher: | St. Martin's Press | | Edition: | 1st Edition | | Page Count: | 304 Pages | | Publication Date: | November 28, 2006 | | Sales Rank: | 458,561th |
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EDITORIAL REVIEWS | Product Description We use antibacterial soap to wash our hands, we swab doorknobs with antibacterial wipes, we pop antibiotics at the first sign of disease - all to avoid infection. But we are all infected. From before birth to after death, infection is what makes humans human. In a startling, chilling, and inspiring narrative, veteran microbiologist, and author Gerald Callahan, explores the world of the microscopic creatures that live on, in, and around us. Did you know that: our overuse of antibiotics is placing us on then cusp of a resurgence of diseases we had thought long conquered? and, many ailments - from schizophrenia and gastric ulcers to obsessive-compulsive disorder - are now being linked to infections? Infection will awaken you to the microscopic brethren that ensure our health as well as take it from us. For better or worse, infection shapes our lives. |
CUSTOMER REVIEWS (Average Customer Rating: 4.5 based on 6 reviews)
| Informative, but Ultimately Uninspiring by Michael M. Gollaher (Boise, Idaho, USA) 3 Stars October 14, 2009 Perhaps it was because I enjoyed Prof. Callahan's other work, "Faith, Madness and Spontaneous Human Combustion" that this one left me flat. Callahan's treatment of the immune system in that book was awesome, gripping and truly inspiring. I rate it as one of the best reads I have ever undertaken. Yet while he has a lot of interesting facts laid out in 'Infection: The Universal Universe,' and presents them in (usually) a warm and readable manner, this book simply doesn't inspire like the mentioned work on the immune system. Not only that, but he can't help sliding into politically correct dogma on occasion, a habit that is very distracting to me. The offense is only occasional and mild, but ends up taking something away from the overall credibility a writer must work so hard to gain and maintain.
I did not really enjoy reading this book, though I learned a tidbit or two.
| | Interesting, but nothing really new... by Rebecca D. Gold (Harmony, PA USA) 3 Stars December 06, 2008 This book is well-written and covers the topic, but it lacks that sharp perspective, wit, and new ideas that really great books of this type have. There's not really anything here you couldn't find anywhere else, and presented more in-depth. It reads as rather a quick overview; perhaps I've read so many of these kinds of books that I expect a more focused and in-depth treatment of the subject. I have no complaints about this book and wouldn't tell you not to buy it, but I will tell you that there are better, more interesting ones.
| | Superb by Michael Spenard (goffstown, nh United States) 5 Stars January 27, 2008 It has been a while since I read this. But I am very fond of this little book and thought I would leave some feedback.
This is a brilliant book. Written to be accessible by any reader in what is a compelling tour of pathology by way of mixing fact with personal story. Most importantly, the author integrates these facts and stories to give the reader a scientific perspective that I can only describe as a pious experience.
The layperson will leave this book with an improved perspective and appreciation for the interaction between macro and microbiology, and the mosaic of humanity at all levels.
I would recommend Matt Ridely's The Red Queen as a good follow up read. Or perhaps Carl Zimmers Parasite Rex.
| | On Infection, the uninvited universe by Nathan Viste-Ross (Minneapolis, Minnesota United States) 5 Stars November 06, 2007 On Infection, the uninvited universe by Gerald N. Callahan (2006)
All thoughtful & interested persons should read this book. It certainly is -or should become- one of the lasting & significant treatise of the 21st century.
Callahan, a professor of Microbiology, Immunology, & Pathology and English (!) at Colorado State University, has crafted an articulate & startling vision that is both science & metaphysic. Both a 'what' and a 'what does it mean?'. His science is rock-solid and his synthesis of the facts is inspired & profound.
In this succinct, pretty straight-forward explanation of disease processes & history, pandemics, friendly & essential micro-organisms, and the structure & function of immunity, Callahan presents a striking claim: Our immune systems are the evolutionary source of our 'selves'. He is not speaking metaphorically but literally: without an immune system, persons would not -could not- exist. Our antibodies create & maintain us as 'I'.
The added benefit of Infection is it's fun to read. Its rich admixture of anecdote, theory & pedagogy make each page an adventure.
I've been buying copies for my family & friends (even my dentist) so I have someone to discuss it with.
As a companion to this. I'd also recommend Callahan's Faith, Madness & Spontaneous Human Combustion. It is less focused (or perhaps just differently focused) than Infection, but no less satisfying.
| | Our bacteria, our friends by R. Iverson (Wyoming) 5 Stars October 22, 2007 We live in times where people think of the microbial world as the enemy to be defeated at all costs. Almost daily we are accosted by headlines proclaiming the dangers of Avian Flu or Methicillin resistant Staph aureus or MRSA. As a physician, I am called on to lead this charge against these microscopic invaders.
But wait, Callahan says, this relationship between human and microbe is not so simple. We are in fact dependent upon the uncountable microbes that live within us and upon us to keep us healthy. From this book, I learned how important these fellow travelers are for our own normal development. Perhaps our obsession with cleanliness and our excessive use of antibiotics should be reconsidered.
The vast majority of microbes live symbiotically with us. It is a mutually beneficial arrangement. Only a select few seek to destroy us, and that often only by accident, for it is rarely in the best interest of a parasite to destroy its host. Furthermore, our overuse of antibiotics is clearly the main cause of the rise of "superbugs", which can evolve resistance to antibiotics in a matter of days. Should we not consider carefully whether the antibiotics we take or the antibiotics we put into our food supply are not, in the long run, creating more problems than they are solving?
Callahan spells out the complex and often confusing relationship we have with the microcosmos in this well researched and entertaining book. He asks very important questions that we need to consider in our daily lives and in our public health policies.
Read this book and take a thrilling ride into this invisible universe.
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