Spillover: Animal Infections and the Next Human Pandemic
Description
A Booklist Top 10 Science Book of 2012, a 2012 New York Times Book Review Notable Book, and a Daily Beast "Top 11 Book of 2012"
A masterpiece of science reporting that tracks the animal origins of emerging human diseases.
The emergence of strange new diseases is a frightening problem that seems to be getting worse. In this age of speedy travel, it threatens a worldwide pandemic. We hear news reports of Ebola, SARS, AIDS, and something called Hendra killing horses and people in Australia—but those reports miss the big truth that such phenomena are part of a single pattern. The bugs that transmit these diseases share one thing: they originate in wild animals and pass to humans by a process called spillover. David Quammen tracks this subject around the world. He recounts adventures in the field—netting bats in China, trapping monkeys in Bangladesh, stalking gorillas in the Congo—with the world’s leading disease scientists. In Spillover Quammen takes the reader along on this astonishing quest to learn how, where from, and why these diseases emerge, and he asks the terrifying question: What might the next big one be?
Praise for Spillover: Animal Infections and the Next Human Pandemic
Starred review. ...a frightening but critically important book for anyone interested in learning about the prospects of the world’s next major pandemic.
— Publishers Weekly
David Quammen might be my favorite living science writer: amiable, erudite, understated, incredibly funny, profoundly humane. The best of his books, The Song of the Dodo, renders the relatively arcane field of island biogeography as gripping as a thriller. That bodes well for his new book, whose subject really is thriller-worthy: how deadly diseases (AIDS, SARS, Ebola) make the leap from animals to humans, and how, where, and when the next pandemic might emerge.
— Kathryn Schulz - New York Magazine
That [Quammen] hasn’t won a nonfiction National Book Award or Pulitzer Prize is an embarrassment.
— Dwight Garner - The New York Times
David Quammen [is] one of that rare breed of science journalists who blend exploration with a talent for synthesis and storytelling.
— Nathan Wolfe - Nature
Starred review. An essential work.
— Booklist
Starred review. A wonderful, eye-opening account of humans versus disease.
— Kirkus Reviews
[Spillover is] David Quammen’s absorbing, lively and, yes, occasionally gory trek through the animal origins of emerging human diseases.
— Cleveland Plain Dealer
As page turning as Richard Preston’s The Hot Zone… [Quammen is] one of the best science writers.
— Seattle Times
[Spillover] delivers news from the front lines of public health. It makes clear that animal diseases are inseparable from us because we are inseparable from the natural world.
— Philadelphia Tribune