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The Demon in the Freezer by Richard Preston
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The Demon in the Freezer: A True Story

by Richard Preston

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631187,351 (3.86)20
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Random House (2002), Edition: 1, Hardcover, 256 pages

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Not for the faint-hearted. During the descriptions of several of the diseases profiled in this book, mainly small pox, I had to stop reading. Small pox is more evil than I thought reality could ever be, and Preston makes that abundantly clear with vivid detail. It’s not a straight-forward modern history of the disease, instead Preston intentionally (and overtly) withholds information at times to allow for well-timed big reveals. I’m sure that works for some readers, but as someone who was most interested in learning the current state of small pox, I found it annoying at his apparent inability to summarize details outside his tightly controlled narrative. ( )
1 vote ebnelson | Jul 31, 2009 |
Richard Preston first got our attention with The Hot Zone, and I will say this about him: he is a terrific story teller. This true account of smallpox virus and anthrax bacteria may leave a couple of loose ends around (it was written in 2002, before the anthrax case came to its unsatisfying conclusion, and you get the sense that he didn't really know what to do about the smallpox story), but that doesn't keep you from turning the pages late into the night. Partly because it's just darn hard to go to sleep, given all the new things you have to worry about! Well told, and scary. ( )
  co_coyote | Jun 30, 2009 |
Preston focuses on the 2001 anthrax attacks, together with the potential for smallpox to be used as a biological weapon.

The story is a bit disjointed, although it mostly follows chronological order. It is quite compelling, though. Preston gives us the science, but also close and insightful looks at the involved personalities. A very fast read. ( )
  breic2 | Jun 2, 2009 |
Another good one from Preston. These books can be more horrifying than any horror book because they are about reality. Science writing, but not dry or boring at all and understandable even if you don't have a science back round. It will make you wonder if that smallpox injection which left a scar on your arm from grade school in the sixties, was actually worth it after all (probably not, its too old). The foolishness is that all this fear (and possible future horror) could have been prevented if only the sample of a disease which was supposed to be eradicated in the world wide population was actually destroyed and not mysteriously lost from the laboratory where it was stored. ( )
  kaida46 | May 25, 2009 |
Richard Preston is quickly becoming one of my favorite non-fiction authors and I'll tell you why: he can scare the bejeezus out of me with very little effort. Take that, Stephen King!

I've read two of Preston's other works, The Cobra Event and The Hot Zone, both of which dealt with viruses that prey on the human species. The Cobra Event was a work of fiction, Hot Zone was non. Hot Zone, for interested parties, was a close look at the Ebola virus, specifically the Marburg strain, which traveled to the United States not too long ago. The book took an indepth look at how close we humans stand on the brink of annihilation from some of the simplest and most complex organisms on the planet- viruses. I won't ruin the books for potential readers, but I would highly suggest picking both of them up if you are, like me, into that doomsday-y kind of (non)fiction.

The Demon in the Freezer was written along the same lines. It is a work of non-fiction, compiled from interviews with the involved parties and through documents that the author worked through to get his facts. Demon was, I thought, not as well written as Cobra or Zone, but it is still definitely a book I would recommend reading.

One of the things I like about reading a Preston book is that he manages to explain all the medical and scientific jargon in a way that even simple lay-people like yours truly can understand. He's no Greg Bear or, to some extent, Michael Crichton (though Crichton did an admirable job). The information is factual, succinct, and easy to comprehend.

Demon was written shortly after the 9/11 attacks and takes a look at both bioterrorism and smallpox (variola). Preston recounts the anthrax scare of 2001, when letters were mailed to many government officials containing anthrax spores designed to circulate through large buildings and infect many people. People did in fact die of anthrax infection, which led to a panic similar to what is being experienced now by many people concerned with the swine flu (H1N1).

What was so incredibly frightening about Demon was the description of just how deadly smallpox could be if allowed to spread throughout a globalized world, where almost every part of the globe is readily accessible with little more than a day's travel. Unlike anthrax, smallpox can be passed from person to person and can be grown in garage labs at the expense of little more than what a new economy car would cost. It can also be modified to be resistant to medications, as Australian experiments with mousepox proved. The thought of a genetically modified virus that has a 95% fatality rate is truly terrifying.

Even more terrifying: tons of smallpox produced by the Soviet Union before it became Russia. This smallpox was loaded onto missiles pointed toward the United States. With the dissolution of the Union, the smallpox disappeared. It is unknown where much of it went, though speculation is rampant that it might have ended up in the hands of terrorists all over the world. The thought of smallpox in the hands of, say, al-Qaeda scares the shit out of me. If something naturally occurring, like the swine flu, has been so successful in traveling all over the United States, imagine something like variola major (the more dangerous strain of smallpox) being released in strategic locations throughout the nation. *shudder*

Variola in its natural form may have been eradicated throughout the globe, but it still exists in government (and perhaps terrorist) freezers the world over. If you think HIV or H1N1 is bad, try not to imagine someone setting off a smallpox bomb in New York or San Francisco, where it would quickly become a global problem. I would hate to see Stephen King become a prophet. ( )
  Schehezerade | May 9, 2009 |
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Epigraph
Chance favors the prepared mind.
-Louis Pasteur
Dedication
This book is lovingly dedicated to Michelle
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In the early nineteen seventies, a British photo retoucher named Robert Stevens arrived in south Florida to take a job at the National Enquirer, which is published in Palm Beach County.
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Wikipedia in English (4)

Lassa fever

Richard Preston

Smallpox

William Foege

Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0375508562, Hardcover)

On December 9, 1979, smallpox, the most deadly human virus, ceased to exist in nature. After eradication, it was confined to freezers located in just two places on earth: the Center for Disease Control in Atlanta and the Maximum Containment Laboratory in Siberia. But these final samples were not destroyed at that time, and now secret stockpiles of smallpox surely exist. For example, since the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, and the subsequent end of its biological weapons program, a sizeable amount of the former Soviet Union's smallpox stockpile remains unaccounted for, leading to fears that the virus has fallen into the hands of nations or terrorist groups willing to use it as a weapon. Scarier yet, some may even be trying to develop a strain that is resistant to vaccines. This disturbing reality is the focus of this fascinating, terrifying, and important book.

A longtime contributor to The New Yorker and author of the bestseller The Hot Zone, Preston is a skillful journalist whose work flows like a science fiction thriller. Based on extensive interviews with smallpox experts, health workers, and members of the U.S. intelligence community, The Demon in the Freezer details the history and behavior of the virus and how it was eventually isolated and eradicated by the heroic individuals of the World Health Organization. Preston also explains why a battle still rages between those who want to destroy all known stocks of the virus and those who want to keep some samples alive until a cure is found. This is a bitterly contentious point between scientists. Some worry that further testing will trigger a biological arms race, while others argue that more research is necessary since there are currently too few available doses of the vaccine to deal with a major outbreak. The anthrax scare of October, 2001, which Preston also writes about in this book, has served to reinforce the present dangers of biological warfare.

As Preston eloquently states in this powerful book, this scourge, once contained, was let loose again due to human weakness: "The virus's last strategy for survival was to bewitch its host and become a source of power. We could eradicate smallpox from nature, but we could not uproot the virus from the human heart." --Shawn Carkonen

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:55 -0400)

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