'Darwin's Audubon'
by Gerald Weissmann


I never used to like essays until a few years ago when a friend suggested I read Sven Birkerts' "Guttenberg Elegies", a set of essays about the fate of reading in an electronic age. Emboldened by this, I bought "Darwin's Audubon". Dr Weissmann is a highly respected doctor and rheumatology researcher, as well as being an art historian and a liberal skeptic.

Darwin's Audubon - book cover

This is a difficult book to characterise, because of the vast range of its subject matter, but perhaps its sub-title says it best - Science and the Liberal Imagination. Among the topics covered are how the vectors for Lyme disease were tracked down, an amazing eye witness description of the Nobel Prize ceremonies and a fascinating tale of Christopher Columbus and Reiter's syndrome. To me though, the tour de force is the harrowing tale of losing a patient to the complications of a botched back street abortion in the era before abortion was legalised.

Before I leave Dr Weissmann's book I'd like to say that this book is also one of the best examples of the art of book making that I have come across for a long time - from its excellent typography and design through to its solid and comfortable binding. Definitely recommended.

Alan Lenton
1 December 1999


Darwin's Audubon
by Gerald Weissmann
0306459817
Plenum 337pp $28.95


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