
Robert S. Desowitz
Who Gave Pinta to the Santa Maria?
Tropical Diseases in a Temperate Climate
An instructive, often humorous, chronicle of how the worms and germs of the tropical world
have made and are making their way north.
We live in a fool's paradise, comforted, despite all evidence
to the contrary, that we are insulated from the scourging
microbial and parasitic diseases of the tropics. Yet past and
present history reveals that many of the "classic" tropical diseases
are, in reality, temperate too yellow fever in Philadelphia,
the Ebola virus in Maryland and Virginia, and the Mexican
pig tapeworm in Brooklyn.
Who Gave Pinta to the Santa
Maria? traces the origin of these extraordinary, but by no means isolated, cases. Did the
crew of the Santa Maria bring syphilis (Pinta) back from the
New World? Did Charles Darwin suffer a protracted illness
and eventually die from the bite of an assassin bug while
traveling through Argentina? Writing with enthusiasm and from
wide medical experience, Dr. Robert Desowitz is a veritable
Sherlock Holmes of parasites and pathogens. Spanning a human
history of over 50,000 years, Who Gave Pinta to the Santa
Maria? also looks ahead to the constant dangers of microbial
diseases of unprecedented savagery"Doomsday bugs" creeping
into the industrialized world.
Robert S. Desowitz is professor emeritus of tropical
medicine and medical microbiology at the University of Hawaii.
He lives in Pinehurst, North Carolina. He is the author of
three other Norton books: New Guinea Tapeworms and Jewish
Grandmothers, The Thorn in the Starfish, and The Malaria
Capers.
"Like Stephen Jay Gould and
Lewis Thomas, Desowitz manages to make the basic principles of his subject
immediately comprehensible to the general reader."--Michiko Kakutani, New York Times
"Like a novelist, [Desowitz] draws
the reader into the human tragedy of
disease."--Betty Ann Kevles, Los Angeles Times
1997 / hardcover / ISBN 0-393-04084-4 /
288 pages / science/biology
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