Available Formats
Dangerous Miracle: A natural history of antibiotics and how we burned through them
By (Author) Liam Shaw
Vintage Publishing
The Bodley Head Ltd
26th August 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Microbiology (non-medical)
Social and cultural history
Human biology
Popular medicine and health
Scientific research
Paperback
320
Width 153mm, Height 234mm, Spine 40mm
700g
Antibiotics - one of humanity's greatest achievements, but invented by bacteria. The Healing Earth is an epic narrative of scientific discovery and innovation but also of the exploitation of the natural world in pursuit of the 'fossil fuels' of medicine. Antibiotics- one of humanity's greatest achievements - but invented by microbes. An epic narrative of discovery and innovation - but also of extraction and exploitation. This is the spellbinding story of how we have burned through the fossil fuels of medicine. Since their advent, antibiotics have saved millions of lives, marking one of the greatest medical advances in our history. Dangerous Miracle weaves together the grand arc of the evolution of antibiotics over millions of years with a history of the past century- first as we mined the earth for naturally occurring antibiotic molecules, then as we learned to synthesise our own. But like fossil fuels, antibiotics are a finite resource which we've regarded as a cheap, everlasting fuel. They are unlike other drugs- every time we use them we increase the possibility of antibiotic resistance emerging, risking their future effectiveness. If we want antibiotics to have a future, we need to prepare to adapt. And fast. Rich with pioneering characters, great breakthroughs and grave risks, Dangerous Miracle is a grand drama of science, history and politics. It is a revelatory account of the miraculous history and uncertain future of antibiotics from a gifted writer.
Liam Shaw is a biologist researching the evolution and spread of antibiotic resistance. For the past four years he has been a Wellcome funded research fellow at the University of Oxford. His writing has appeared in the London Review of Books, Morning Star, and Private Eye. Dangerous Miracle is his first book.