By: Bill Wasik and Monica Murphy
Why I Got This Book: This book popped up in my recommended book in list in my audible acount and I got it just out of curiosity.
Central Thymes:
• This Book is about is about the history of the interaction of humanity as a species with the Rabbis virus and its particular impact on our culture. But the book also does focus on some other sickness that humans also get from Animals, which the authors mention that 50% of all human sicknesses come from other animals.
• Among the many animals, rabbis can infect some of the most common are dogs, bats, skunks, rats, and raccoons, elevating their levels of aggression leading to more potential attacks which through bites the virus spreads, and it can cross from one species to another easily.
• Approximately 50.000 people per year die of Rabbis, mostly in countries where it is difficult to access the vaccines and modern medicine that help stop the virus from taking hold because once it reaches the brain the sickness has pretty much a 100% death rate. Mass vaccination campaigns for dogs (mass castration also helps) to eradicate the sickness does not get any traction in the developing countries because of a lack of political motivation, authorities mostly only take action when its too late and there is an outbreak like in the old Soviet republics, southeast Asia and Africa, many times there is a total lack of sanitary policy and protocols if there is an outbreak. But richer countries by no means are immune to a large-scale outbreak even New York city had to deal with a hoard of rabid raccoons a couple of years back in 2010.
• Rabbis mostly found its way into human society because of the domestication of Dogs, who are the perfect host for this particular virus and this sickness sparks a special fear in people because its potencially their best friends can become their harbinger of death from one moment to another. Outside of the danger of death Rabbis was perceived as a sickness that brings out the inner evil animal from inside.
• Most visible symptom hydrophobia.
• Louis Pasteur developed the vaccine against rabbis, but the book really makes sure to show the reader how important too since Pasteur was creating the pasteurization proses, a vaccine against anthrax for animals and creating a model for centers of investigation that would reach a global level.
• Book illustrates how rabbis have had a tremendous impact on human culture from all the way back to Egypte, ancient Greece, Babylon and even India, this sickness appears in all kinds of ancient text, found its way into mythology and language influencing the creation of words relative to rage and anger. Even in the more modern time rabbis served for inspiration for some very famous monster like werewolves, vampires and to a degree zombies. The bite is the mode of transmission of rabbis and the way these monster created new ones. And in the case of vampires, there is an aspect of hypersexuality related to these characters that sometimes is a symptom of rabbis, even their aversion to holy water can be linked to hydrophobia. But what the book illustrates is how the fear of rabbis like other pandemics feeds into the concept of the undead, because once someone was infected by rabbis literally they were walking dead.
• All Zoonotic diseases like Rabbis, Smallpox, the Bubonic Plague... like many others thrived with the growth of cities.
What I liked :
• The book itself is a very easy read, very interesting and dynamic at the same time, it got me hooked on a subject that I would not be normally drawn to, and thanks to the fact it straight to the point I finished it in about a week.
• Each chapter covers a specific moment in history and talks about myths and stories from that era that were fueled by rabbis.
• I found fascinating that the new testament and early Christians had a poor view of dogs which had a cultural impact heading into the dark ages.
• I found it very interesting that early myths relative to vampires had no relation t bats, but when vampire bats were discovered in America, rabbis in a way bridges the gap between these monsters and animals, incorporating bats into the vampire mythology, originally vampire would change into dogs.
• Book dive into the evolution of dogs as pets all ready in ancient Greece and in the middle ages the nobility and clergy really appreciated dogs because of the role in the hunt, while peseants had a more negative view of K9s having to deal with semi wild dogs, rabid dogs and during the plague seeing dogs eat corpses that is way bodies are buried 6 feet under. But during the industrial revolution and the slow growth of a middle class having dogs as pets became much more generalized.
• The book goes into great detail how Pasteur created his vaccine against rabbis.
What I didn't like or Debatable Stuff:
• The book at brief moments gets a little gory and explicit.
• The book goes relatively off topic a couple of times focusing on other Zoonitic diseases.
Overall: The book gets a 9 out of 10, it gets you thinking