Bill Wasikis the editorial director ofThe New York Times Magazine. He has written multiple books, includingAnd Then There's This,Rabid, andOur Kindred Creatures- How Americans Came to Feel the Way They Do About Animals.
“A searing narrative.”
—The New York Times
“In this keen and exceptionally well-written book, rife with
surprises, narrative suspense and a steady flow of expansive
insights, ‘the world’s most diabolical virus’ conquers the
unsuspecting reader’s imaginative nervous system. . . . A smart,
unsettling, and strangely stirring piece of work.”
—San Francisco Chronicle
“Fascinating. . . . Wasik and Murphy chronicle more than two
millennia of myths and discoveries about rabies and the animals
that transmit it, including dogs, bats and raccoons.”
—The Wall Street Journal
“Rabid delivers the drama of Louis Pasteur’s courageous work
developing the rabies vaccine at the same time it details the
disease’s place in our cultural history, taking us from Homer to
the Bronte sisters to Zora Neale Hurston to Richard Matheson. . . .
All along the book’s prose and pace shine—the book is as fast as
the virus is slow.”
—The Seattle Times
“A very readable, fascinating account of a terrifying
disease….Wasik and Murphy grippingly trace the cultural history of
the disease. . . . Rabid reminds us that the disease is a chilling,
persistent reminder of our own animal connections, and of the
simple fact that humans don’t call all of the shots.”
—The Boston Globe
“Compelling. . . . Murphy and Wasik give life, context and
understanding to the terrifying disease. Like the virus itself,
this fascinating book moves quickly, exploring both the
marginalized status and deadly nature of the virus. And as the
authors trace the influence of rabies through history, Rabid
becomes nearly impossible to put down.”
—New Scientist
“An elegant exploration of the science behind one of the most
horrible way to die.”
—Chris Anderson, author of The Long Tail
“This book is not for the squeamish. Yet those who are fascinated
by how viruses attack the body, by the history of vaccination and
by physicians’ efforts to save the most desperately ill patients
will want to read it. There is also a happy ending: scientists are
working to harness rabies as a potent drug delivery vehicle.”
—Scientific American
“[Wasik and Murphy] offer an in-depth look at a disease so
insidious that it even turns our best friends—dogs—against us. The
pair convincingly link the history of rabies…with the history of
man’s fear of nature and the unknown, and our own latent capacity
for beastliness.”
—The Daily Beast
“Thrilling, smart, and devilishly entertaining, Rabid is one of
those books that changes your sense of history—and reminds us how
much our human story has been shaped by the viruses that live among
us.”
—Steven Johnson, author of The Ghost Map
“Rabies has always been as much metaphor as disease, making it an
excellent subject for cultural history. . . . As Wasik and Murphy
document . . . the horror of rabies has been with us since the
beginning of human civilization.”
—Bookforum
“Funny and spry. . . . It’s a rare pleasure to read a nonfiction
book by authors who research like academics but write like
journalists.”
—Alice Gregory, n+1
“Readable, fascinating, informative, and occasionally
gruesome, this is highly recommended for anyone interested in
medical history or the cultural history of disease.”
—Library Journal (starred review)
“Take Bill Wasik, one of our most perceptive journalistic
storytellers, have him join forces with Monica Murphy, scholar of
public health, and you end up with this erudite, true-life creep
show of a book. It turns out that the rabies virus is a good bit
more fascinating and at least as frightening as any of those
blood-thirsty monsters that have stalked our fairy tales,
multiplexes, and dreams.”
—Donovan Hohn, author of Moby Duck
“Ambitious and smart.”
—Publisher’s Weekly
“Terrible virus, fascinating history in Rabid.”
—NPR
“As entertaining as they are on rabies in culture, the authors also
eruditely report on medicine and public health issues through
history, from ancient Assyria to Bali to Manhattan in the last five
years, showing that while the disease may be contained, it may
never be fully conquered. Surprisingly fun reading about a
fascinating malady.”
—Kirkus Reviews
“The ultimate weird dad book.”
—Very Short List
“The rabies virus is a microscopic particle of genes and proteins.
And yet it has cast a fearful shadow over all of human history.
Bill Wasik and Monica Murphy have produced an eerily elegant
meditation on disease and madness, dogs and vampires. It's as
infectious as its subject.”
—Carl Zimmer, NPR contributor and author of Parasite Rex
“A fun read, rivaling a Stephen King novel for page-turning
thrills.”
—The Awl
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