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The Wisdom of Plagues

Lessons from 25 Years of Covering Pandemics

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Award-winning New York Times reporter Donald G. McNeil, Jr. reflects on twenty-five years of covering pandemics—how governments react to them, how the media covers them, how they are exploited, and what we can do to prepare for the next one—in this "fascinating, ferocious fusillade against humanity's two deadliest enemies: disease and itself" (The Economist).
For millions of Americans, Donald G. McNeil, Jr. was a comforting voice when the COVID-19 pandemic broke out. He was a regular reporter on The New York Times's popular podcast The Daily and told listeners early on to prepare for the worst. He'd covered public health for twenty-five years and quickly realized that an obscure virus in Wuhan, China, was destined to grow into a global pandemic rivaling the 1918 Spanish flu. Because of his clear advice, a generation of Times readers knew the risk was real but that they might be spared by taking the right precautions. Because of his prescient work, The New York Times won the 2021 Pulitzer Gold Medal for Public Service.

The Wisdom of Plagues is "must-reading for preparing us better for the next unavoidable epidemic" (Peter Piot, MD, co-discoverer of Ebola) as McNeil shares his account of what he learned over a quarter-century of reporting in over sixty counties. Many science reporters understand the basics of diseases—from how a virus works to what goes into making a vaccine. But very few understand the psychology of how small outbreaks turn into pandemics, why people refuse to believe they're at risk, or why they reject protective measures like quarantine or vaccines. The COVID-19 pandemic was the story McNeil had trained his whole life to cover. His expertise and breadth of sources let him make many accurate predictions in 2020 about the course that a deadly new virus would take and how different countries would respond.

By the time McNeil wrote his last New York Times stories, he had not lost his compassion—but he had grown far more stone-hearted about how governments should react. He had witnessed enough disasters and read enough history to realize that while every epidemic is different, failure was the one constant. Small case-clusters ballooned into catastrophe because weak leaders became mired in denial. Citizens refused to make even minor sacrifices for the common good. They were encouraged in that by money-hungry entrepreneurs and power-hungry populists. Science was ignored, obvious truths were denied, and the innocent too often died. In The Wisdom of Plagues, "one of the most enlightening books on public health" (Lena Wen, MD), McNeil offers tough, prescriptive advice on what we can do to improve global health and be better prepared for the inevitable next pandemic.
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    • Library Journal

      August 1, 2023

      A Chancellor/Kennedy award--winning reporter, McNeil shares what he's learned from 25 years of covering pandemics, from SARS to Zika to Covid, in The Wisdom of Plagues. (Librarians may want to note that in 2019 McNeil had a controversial parting with the New York Times after several decades' work there.) Prepub Alert.

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      November 1, 2023
      More than one million American deaths, political polarization, and an increased anti-vaccination movement: the COVID-19 pandemic has left an indelible mark on society and individuals. In his reporting on plagues, McNeil, a longtime global health journalist for the New York Times, chillingly points out, ""The first casualty of pandemics is trust"" (in science, doctors, and the government). His reflections on COVID-19 are rousing, infused with compassion yet sometimes a bit preachy and tinged with anger, especially at the mishandling of the pandemic. He recalls ""the national insanity and the exhausted acceptance that would ultimately descend on us."" McNeil reconnoiters the origins of pandemics and the ways they spread. He suggests approaches to warding off future ones. Although his discussion includes outbreaks of other infectious diseases, including AIDS, H1N1 (""swine flu""), SARS, and Zika, COVID-19 occupies center stage. McNeil warns, ""When a new disease erupts, it is usually greeted not with alarm but with inertia."" He goes on to elucidate how skepticism, denialism, fatalism, rumors, false remedies, and cultural misunderstandings help fuel the spread of pandemics. Hard lessons that should never be forgotten.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      November 15, 2023
      A former New York Times reporter surveys the world of pandemics, epidemics, and plagues. "Maybe someday an asteroid or a nuclear exchange will put paid to us as an endless winter did to the dinosaurs, but thus far in our history, only diseases have done damage to rival that," writes McNeil, author of Zika: The Emerging Epidemic. As the experience of the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic has shown, world-transforming diseases are always with us--sometimes because we're looking for them in the wrong places. When Covid-19 arrived, China had a formidable state apparatus at hand that was able to clamp down on the entire population, ordering people to shelter in place and doing extensive tracing of any contacts victims might have had. The result was that China suffered far fewer deaths than it might have. The U.S., writes McNeil, should have had a proportional death rate, but it did not: The 1.1 million should have been 560,000, but "what cost those 540,000 Americans their lives was poor leadership." McNeil revisits other pandemics, such as Zika and AIDS, and points out numerous instances of poor leadership on display there, too. There's not much actual news in this book, certainly not as compared to the basement-to-ceiling research of David Quammen, but McNeil does a good job of isolating some of the ancillary factors that have fed into mistake-ridden American responses to pandemics. "To my mind," he writes, "the most dangerous profiteers by far are the prominent anti-vaxxers," going on to name Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in particular. Chalk it up to our so-called individualism, perhaps, but, McNeil adds, "every mass murderer and terrorist is a driven nonconformist, a hero in his personal fantasies." A serviceable work of popular science made sharper by its political edge.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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