Virusphere: Ebola, AIDS, Influenza and the Hidden World of the Virus
By (Author) Frank Ryan
HarperCollins Publishers
William Collins
10th March 2020
19th March 2020
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Microbiology (non-medical)
Infectious and contagious diseases
Medical research
Evolution
Evolutionary anthropology / Human evolution
History of medicine
History: plagues, diseases, famines
Medical microbiology and virology
Popular medicine and health: the human body
579.2
Paperback
288
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 18mm
210g
A virologists insight into how viruses evolve and why global epidemics are inevitable
In 1993 a previously healthy young man was drowning in the middle of a desert, in fluids produced by his own lungs. This was the beginning of the terrifying Sin Nombre hantavirus epidemic and the start of a scientific journey that would forever change our understanding of what it means to be human.
After witnessing the Sin Nombre outbreak, Dr Frank Ryan began researching viral evolution and was astonished to discover that its inextricable from the evolution of all life on Earth. From AIDS and Ebola to the common cold, Ryan explores the role of the virus within every ecosystem on the planet. His gripping conclusions shed new light on the natural world, proving that what doesnt kill you really does make you (and your species) stronger.
Praise for Virusphere:
A fascinating book that is well structured absorbing [and] makes an engrossing and fervent argument The Inquisitive Biologist
Praise for Frank Ryan:
'Extremely well written Frank Ryan has the page-turning and spine-chilling ability of a good novelist'
Sunday Telegraph
'Ryan is very good at making technical matters comprehensible to the lay reader, but more impressive still is the away he conveys the intellectual excitement and elation of scientific discovery'
Literary Review
Dr Ryan writes well in a difficult technical field, weaving the technicalities of scientific history, medicine, molecular biology and evolution into the human narratives Very readable and disturbing
New York Times
Originally qualified as a doctor, Frank Ryan is now one of the pioneers of the role of viruses in evolution. He was recently made Honorary Research Fellow in the Department of Animal and Plant Sciences at the University of Sheffiled, with the express purpose of developing his evolutionary concepts and helping to translate evolutionary science into medicine. He is the author of four general books, including a New York Times Non-Fiction Book of the Year (Tuberculosis: The Greatest Story Never Told).