Why did I love this book?
I laughed so hard at this book. It's a collection of reports from eighteenth and nineteenth-century medical journals in which doctors shared their most interesting and unusual cases.
I learned about the sailor who alleviated his companion's boredom at sea by swallowing knives and later passing them--until one got stuck. About the use of a chicken to cure a child's fever, because of course. About how cigar smoke could rescue someone from drowning (guess where the good doctor was supposed to blow it?). And the physician who thought he could train his infant son to be amphibious by immersing him in water. I can't remember if he kept a lighted cigar nearby during experiments.
I delight in retelling the stories for my students. Still, I'm careful also to note Morris's perceptive point: that however bizarre the treatments seem today, doctors of the past really were trying to help, using the medical knowledge available at the time. It's just really hard to help anyone if you don't know what germs are.
1 author picked The Mystery of the Exploding Teeth and Other Curiosities from the History of Medicine as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.
A mysterious epidemic of dental explosions...
* A teenage boy who got his wick stuck in a candlestick.
* A remarkable woman who, like a human fountain, spurted urine from virtually every orifice.
These are just a few of the anecdotal gems that have until now lain undiscovered in medical journals for centuries. This fascinating collection of historical curiosities explores some of the strangest cases that have perplexed doctors across the world.
From seventeenth-century Holland to Tsarist Russia, from rural Canada to a whaler in the Pacific, many are monuments to human stupidity - such as the sailor who swallowed…