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Pale Rider
Pale Rider: The Spanish Flu of 1918 and How It Changed the World | Laura Spinney
29 posts | 26 read | 35 to read
In 1918, the Italian-Americans of New York, the Yupik of Alaska and the Persians of Mashed had almost nothing in common except for a virus--one that triggered the worst pandemic of modern times and had a decisive effect on the history of the twentieth century. The Spanish flu of 1918-1920 was one of the greatest human disasters of all time. It infected a third of the people on Earth--from the poorest immigrants of New York City to the king of Spain, Franz Kafka, Mahatma Gandhi and Woodrow Wilson. But despite a death toll of between 50 and 100 million people, it exists in our memory as an afterthought to World War I. In this gripping narrative history, Laura Spinney traces the overlooked pandemic to reveal how the virus travelled across the globe, exposing mankind's vulnerability and putting our ingenuity to the test. As socially significant as both world wars, the Spanish flu dramatically disrupted--and often permanently altered--global politics, race relations and family structures, while spurring innovation in medicine, religion and the arts. It was partly responsible, Spinney argues, for pushing India to independence, South Africa to apartheid and Switzerland to the brink of civil war. It also created the true "lost generation." Drawing on the latest research in history, virology, epidemiology, psychology and economics, Pale Rider masterfully recounts the little-known catastrophe that forever changed humanity.
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review
Singout
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Pickpick

A real eye-opener, especially for these times, unless, of course, you don‘t want to think about pandemics😉.
A really thorough explanation of the Spanish flu, including its precedents, false nomenclature, impact and diverse responses all over the globe and particularly links to World War I, outcomes related to healthcare support systems and deeper understandings of the biology of viruses and pandemics.
#Booked2023 #Pandemic
#Nonfiction2023 #Toxic

Cinfhen Well done 💚I love your choice for #NonFictionChallenge too!!! 14mo
Amiable I‘ve long had a fascination with the 1918 flu epidemic. My great-grandma, who died when I was 14, told us stories about what it was like to live through it. Have you read this one? It‘s my favorite about the pandemic: 14mo
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Singout
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War has a victor, and to him the spoils, the version that is handed down to posterity… when the story of the Spanish flu was told, it was told by those who had got off most lightly, the white and well-off. With very few exceptions, the ones who bore the brunt of it, the ones living in ghettos, or at the rim, have yet to tell their tale. Some, such as the minorities whose language has died with them, never will.

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Singout

“Hemoglutamine, ‘H,” looks like a lollipop. Its stalk projects into the membrane. It is the metaphorical crowbar that allows the virus to break into a cell, while neurominidase, ‘N,‘ is the glass cutter that allows it to exit again.”

H1N1 was the later-assigned code for the “Spanish” flu, as well as the more recent “swine” flu.

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Singout
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“We avoid things we find disgusting…when contagion is a threat. The Caribbean spiny lobster is highly sociable by nature, but it refuses to share its den with another lobster that is infected with a lethal virus.”

This guy looks pretty healthy: he can share my den anytime!

Lindy That‘s cool! 1y
Singout Many examples were given, but this was the dramatic kick-off. 1y
12 likes2 comments
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wanderinglynn
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Mehso-so

I knew very little about the Spanish Flu other than it happened. This book provided an interesting look into the history & how it changed the world, specifically public health & epidemiology. But I felt it started to bog down in the last half.

Book 7 for #joyousjanuary
About a pandemic for #booked2023

Cinfhen I‘m curious too to learn more about the Spanish Flu but I‘ll have to look for a different book 😁 1y
Andrew65 @Cinfhen @wanderinglynn The tagged book gives a good account of the Spanish Flu in the US, and is a very good read. 1y
Cinfhen Thanks @Andrew65 i always meant to read this one!! Thanks for the reminder 🤓 1y
Andrew65 @Cinfhen Hope you enjoy it. 1y
wanderinglynn Thanks for the recommendation @Andrew65 😀 1y
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wanderinglynn
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The book starts with a quote from Terence Ranger, The Spanish Influenza Pandemic of 1918-19 (2003):

“The brevity of the influenza pandemic of 1918 posed great problems to doctors at the time . . . It has posed great problems to historians ever since.”

This is my book about a pandemic for #Booked2023

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mcctrish
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Pickpick

This was a great follow up to my recent read, Emma Donoghue‘s The Pull of the Stars. It covers how the Spanish Flu got worldwide, how it was treated, medical understanding at the time of illness in general and the flu in detail. It also talks about the exhaustive scientific study that went on for decades after the flu to understand the how and why of it and how to prevent or cushion subsequent outbreaks. Our vaccines weren‘t made overnight 🤣

kspenmoll Did you listen or read? I have this in book form. Wondering if audio better? 3y
mcctrish @kspenmoll I listened and it wasn‘t my favourite narration but I do like non-fiction in audio 3y
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mcctrish
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My latest audio read

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Juliwyant
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On hold at the library

Ephemera This looks good. I hope you‘ve read The Great Influenza already, it‘s excellent. 3y
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LibraryCin
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Mehso-so

I listened to the audio. My mind wandered in and out. I lost interest a bit more looking at the countries individually than looking at the pandemic in a broader sense. It sure was interesting to see the parallels to today – one of those parallels being the health measures that governments try to take with varying results of compliance.

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rmaclean4
Pickpick

Oddly comforting read. Nice to hear about a pandemic that the world survived in the past. Loved the writing. 4 🌟 highly recommend.

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Kell1
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Pickpick

I was looking for a book to give me an idea of what the Spanish Flu was like, how it started, how it finished and it was managed at the time. This book does cover it and some more. It's filled with interesting stories about countries and people from all over the world. The similarities with the current pandemic are undeniable which proves the old saying that history repeats itself... unfortunately. I reccomend this book 100%.

SamAnne I read this one earlier this year and agree. So many parallels. I read this one along with And The Band Played On. 4y
Kell1 Will check that one @SamAnne , thanks 4y
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Susanita
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1. I‘ve probably recommended the tagged book the most, because it‘s so...pertinent.
2. I don‘t usually seek out recommendations. They seem to come at me from all sides without my having to look for them.
#two4tuesday

TheSpineView Thanks for playing! Happy Tuesday! 🌞📚🤩 4y
25 likes1 comment
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Susanita
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I know I‘m late for #Booked2020 but wanted to catch up with myself anyway. I previously posted The Fateful Lightning as #liveandlearn but Pale Rider definitely applies too!

Reading a book set in Australia is probably as close as I‘ll get for the foreseeable future. #armchairtravel

I didn‘t especially like the romance, but it does have a #hatoncover

BarbaraTheBibliophage Great job! 4y
Cinfhen Yay!! These will count for next drawing....remember to post them in September 😜 4y
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BarbaraTheBibliophage
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Pickpick

In under 350 pp, Spinney takes us around the world, detailing pandemic experiences in both remote and urban places. She covers the science and the medicine, such as it was back then. Also the personal impact to generations beyond just those alive at the time. The lessons learned here improved our approach to pandemic. Yet, disappointingly many things remain the same.

Full review http://www.TheBibliophage.com #thebibliophage2020
#nonfictionnerds

Crazeedi I have to read this one 4y
BarbaraTheBibliophage Oh, and this was my #doublespin book. Not sure I‘ll get my #bookspin done though... @TheAromaofBooks 📚♥️ 4y
BarbaraTheBibliophage @Crazeedi I liked it for the breadth, but some reviewers said it was disjointed. It wasn‘t straight chronological, which actually worked for me. 4y
See All 11 Comments
TheAromaofBooks Woohoo!!! 4y
Crazeedi @BarbaraTheBibliophage I have read a couple on this topic and have a couple on my kindle, I'm very interested 4y
mirnas Great book! It helped me a lot at the begining of the pandemic to put things in focus. 4y
BarbaraTheBibliophage @mirnass Yes, it‘s definitely valuable right now! 4y
BarbaraTheBibliophage @Crazeedi I have a few more also. I thought it would be great to read at the beginning of the quarantine here. But I was too freaked out. The situation isn‘t much better, but I‘m not as emotional. So I‘m making my way through them. 🤪 4y
BarbaraTheBibliophage @Crazeedi That‘s the same one I started and had to put down! 🤪 4y
Crazeedi @BarbaraTheBibliophage Wow! That's amazing 4y
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SamAnne
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Pickpick

An educational read. In all the histories I've read about WWI, the early 20th century, the Spanish flu is a footnote to the larger story. A great book that looks at the life and impact of a worldwide pandemic and how it shapes politics, war, society, culture, art, history. While the book is a little all over the place, I highly recommend.

SamAnne A side note: Interesting to finish this book & Sense & Sensibility on the same day. Spinney talks about how surviving the Spanish flu, losing family members, living through the pandemic affected the outlooks and views of writers, artists, intellectuals. In S & S, Marianne survives a terrible illness and realizes the impact her death would have had on her family, and pledges to become more responsible, ruled by “sense.“ #pemberlittens 4y
kspenmoll I so like your connection to S & S. This book looks like a fascinating read. 4y
KVanRead Great review. It‘s interesting how much of the impact on society etc had been solely attributed to WWI. Very eye-opening to think about the Lost Generation through this lens. 4y
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KVanRead
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Pickpick

Many fascinating stories, facts, and ideas crammed into this one. A very ambitious scope for a little over 300 pages making it a bit scattered but also dense at times. Biggest/most distressing takeaway is how human behavior does not seem to have changed at all and we seem to be repeating all the same mistakes over again. 🤦🏻‍♀️ All in all a worthwhile read. ⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2

SamAnne Almost@done and agree@with your review. 4y
KVanRead @SamAnne thx, look forward to yours 😊 4y
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KVanRead
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Next up on #audio. Have been avoiding virus lit so far, but how nuts is it that it now seems like a good distraction????

SamAnne I‘m 3/4 through this. Really fascinating read. A little dense in parts so I hope it works with audio! 4y
merelybookish You're back!! 👏👏 4y
KVanRead @SamAnne yes a lot to take in on audio but still quite good! 4y
KVanRead @merelybookish thanks 😊🙏 4y
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Susanita
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I fell asleep on the couch before I could finish this and post my #bookreport but not because it was a boring book! A little scattered maybe, but interesting.

I‘m a little scattered too and will probably set aside the McEwan #authoramonth choice to finish later.

For the moment, I‘m only five books off the pace for my Goodreads yearly goal. It is what it is.

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Susanita
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How to contain a pandemic. A few pages later she talks about...social distancing. This is one book that will NOT go to the #littlefreelibrary when I‘m done. #biblioMAYnia

SamAnne Agreed. Finishing it this week. 4y
OriginalCyn620 📚👍🏻📚 4y
31 likes2 comments
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sarahljensen
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Mehso-so

I enjoyed this book, but overall it felt too fragmented.

SamAnne I‘m about one third through and haven‘t formulated an opinion but am really liking the subject matter. 4y
sarahljensen Keep going. I'm not sorry I read it, I just wished it was organized better or perhaps more focused. 4y
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Pedrocamacho
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Pickpick

Still a little obsessed with pandemics, viruses, and the like. This book is fantastic for understanding the scope, progression, and impact of the 1918 Spanish Flu pandemic (which definitely did not originate in Spain and didn‘t completely burn out until 1920). When I read Tuchman‘s “A Distant Mirror”, I was enthralled with a new understanding of the ways the Black Death changed the world. This book is worthy but lacks that broad vision.

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Amiable
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Working from home has meant longer hours on the computer and a lot less reading. So I‘ve started getting up an hour earlier to read before logging on. The cat doesn‘t know what to make of this abrupt change to her daily schedule of napping, eating, stretching, lounging on the couch and staring disdainfully at the humans in her life. Nobody really thinks about how pandemics affect the felines of the world. 🤷🏻‍♀️ #KittyLivesMatter

#catsoflitsy

Hestapleton I do the morning reading too! Even just a few minutes makes a difference. Way to set some healthy boundaries for yourself! My cats are also very displeased about this work from home situation. 😹 4y
Soubhiville She looks very disapproving. Lol. My cat is thrilled to get more lap time. 4y
Amiable @Soubhiville She keeps staring at me with this look on her face that says “WTF are you STILL doing here?? 😄 4y
Amiable @Hestapleton If I didn't set the clock earlier to get up and read, it won't get done! Most of my reading usually occurs on my daily train commute (two hours each day). Now that I'm not making the commute, it's just not happening. And my cat keeps wondering why I'm STILL in the house! 😄 4y
kspenmoll You are invading your kitty‘s space and time!😾 4y
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Amiable
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Starting this one tonight. Because why not thoroughly immerse myself in pandemic news. 🤷🏻‍♀️

#pandemicreading

catiewithac Such a good book! 4y
JamieArc If you have Netflix, there is a documentary series called Pandemic. My husband has been watching it and says it‘s really informative, and instead of stoking his anxieties, it has helped. 4y
Amiable @JamieArc I have watched that docuseries, yes! It‘s very good. (edited) 4y
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shanaqui
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1. Playing Lego with my grampy right before he died -- he taught me to overlap the bricks so I could build a solid structure.
2. One sister, one brother-in-law, one guy I call my brother.
3. Uhhhh a year ago ish?
4. Pale Rider -- it's about the 1918 flu pandemic. Fascinating so far, and less focused on the West than the other I read.
5. Anyone who wants it!

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charl08
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Nocebo- harmful anti-placebo effect. I've never come across this before: linked to a loss of faith in your doctor.

Crazeedi Never heard that term either, interesting 5y
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charl08
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Determined to read some of my own books that have been hanging around. A weekend of reading!

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catiewithac
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Pickpick

Not an intimate portrait of the Spanish Flu, but a global, distanced perspective.

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catiewithac
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I love history of disease books. But I love histories of plagues and epidemics best of all!! I was super excited to pick up this book from the library today. Now I know what I will be doing for the rest of the day: reading about the flu 😷 🤧 🤒☠️

melyndarae Medical stuff is fascinating to me. I always say we're overdue for an epidemic or plague. It may be morbid but it has been awhile. Lol. 6y
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