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Scourge Reviews and Endorsements


Kirkus Review
August 2, 2001

"Biological-and-chemical-weapons expert Tucker offers a chilling account of smallpox's history, eradication, and temporary reprieve from total extinction, in virology labs in the US and Russia.

"Beginning with the biological origins of smallpox, Tucker...traces civilization's battle against this particularly disgusting disease. Noting its profound effect on historic events, from Athen's defeat in the Peloponnesian War to Cortez's subjugation of the Aztec empire, the author goes on to document humankind's battles against it, leading up to the World Health Organization's triumph of eradication in the 1960s and '70s. The author spins an engaging tale of the gritty conquerors and accidents of history that allowed smallpox to become a focus of global efforts, narrowly beating out malaria as the scourge of choice for the international community. From African deserts to Bangladeshi slums, untold thousands worked to follow chains of infection and to inoculate in the most trying of conditions, many destroying their own health in the quest to break the back of the disease. As told by Tucker, it's a stirring tale, equaled in emotional impact only by the horrifying saga of what happened after the WHO Nairobi field office documented the world's last known smallpox case in 1978. 'The Kremlin cynically viewed this triumph of international public health as a military opportunity,' he writes. The Soviets had incorporated biological weapons research into their military agenda beginning in the 1930s, and it remained on their five-year plans through the 1992 dissolution of the USSR. Tucker's in-depth report of the tremendous resources and scientific brainpower toiling away in maximum-security Russian labs is mightily compelling, and his command of the myriad international political players and details is masterful. His vivid descriptions of the disease's symptoms, revolting and riveting in equal measure, ensure that only the most jaded reader could lay the book aside.

"A true-life tale of heroes and villians, frighteningly real and marvelously told."


The Library Journal
by Tina Neville, University of South Florida at St. Petersburg Library
August 2001

"A political scientist and an expert on bio-weapons analysis, Tucker provides an engrossing look at the continuing debate over the destruction of smallpox. The author uses numerous interviews with key players to look at the political and social aspects of of the disease. Although a brief history of smallpox is included, the strength of the book lies in the author's description of the process used to eradicate naturally occurring smallpox. Equally valuable is the last section that considers the pros and cons of destroying the laboratory stockpiles of the virus. Postponed several times, the elimination of the remaining virus is now set for 2002. Concern remains among experts that if smallpox were somehow reintroduced into society, the public health system would not be able to contain the disease. The potential viability of smallpox as a biological weapon is covered in reasonable depth. Light on technical language, this accessible book is highly recommended for all libraries."

Order Scourge: The Once and Future Threat of Smallpox from Barnes & Noble or Amazon.com.

For more information on Scourge: The Once and Future Threat of Smallpox, please contact Raymond Zilinskas.


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