James Abel – White Plague

James Abel – White Plague
English | eBook | Size: 324.43 MB


In the frozen Arctic, Marine doctor and bioterrorism expert Joe Rush races against time to uncover the origins of a mysterious and deadly plague threatening not only his crew but humanity itself.

TheGreatCoursesPlus – After The Plague 2022

TheGreatCoursesPlus – After The Plague 2022
English | Tutorial | Size: 8.76 GB


With Geoffrey Chaucers The Canterbury Tales as your portal into a medieval Europe in the throes of the disease, explore how people across the continent reckoned with and responded to the new political, economic, and social realities that emerged during the Black Death.

The Great Influenza The Epic Story of the Deadliest Plague in History

The Great Influenza The Epic Story of the Deadliest Plague in History
English | Size: 529.57 MB
Category: Tutorial


No disease the world has ever known even remotely resembles the great influenza epidemic of 1918. Presumed to have begun when sick farm animals infected soldiers in Kansas, spreading and mutating into a lethal strain as troops carried it to Europe, it exploded across the world with unequaled ferocity and speed. It killed more people in 20 weeks than AIDS has killed in 20 years; it killed more people in a year than the plagues of the Middle Ages killed in a century. Victims bled from the ears and nose, turned blue from lack of oxygen, suffered aches that felt like bones being broken, and died. In the United States, where bodies were stacked without coffins on trucks, nearly seven times as many people died of influenza as in the First World War. In his powerful new book, award-winning historian John M. Barry unfolds a tale that is magisterial in its breadth and in the depth of its research, and spellbinding as he weaves multiple narrative strands together. In this first great collision between science and epidemic disease, even as society approached collapse, a handful of heroic researchers stepped forward, risking their lives to confront this strange disease. Titans like William Welch at the newly formed Johns Hopkins Medical School and colleagues at Rockefeller University and others from around the country revolutionized American science and public health, and their work in this crisis led to crucial discoveries that we are still using and learning from today. Now with a new afterword.