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Barbary Plague: The Black Death in Victorian San Francisco by  Marilyn Chase - First Edition - 2003 - from Aldergrove Books and Biblio.com
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Barbary Plague: The Black Death in Victorian San Francisco

by Chase, Marilyn

First Edition


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Price: $6.95

  • Bookseller: Aldergrove Books US (US)
  • Bookseller Inventory #: 000498
  • Format/binding: Hardcover
  • Book condition: New
  • Jacket condition: As New
  • Edition: First Edition
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • ISBN 10: 0375504966
  • ISBN 13: 9780375504969
  • Publisher: Random House
  • Date published: 2003
  • Pages: 276
  • Size: 6 x 8.75 x 1 inches
  • Weight: 1.2 pounds
  • Keywords: Barbary, Plague, Death, San Francisco,
  • Subjects: HISTORY / Caribbean & West Indies / General;

Book Description

Random House, 2003. Hardcover book is in new, never been read condition. Dust jacket is in like new condition. Minor shelf wear on edges of dust jacket. Inside of book pages are crisp and clean, no stains. ISBN# 0375504966. 2003 edition. 288 pages long. Approx: 9.5 by 6.5 by 1. Publisher: Random House. Additional pictures of condition are always available. Book Descripiton: In 1900, a ship called the Australia docked in San Francisco, carrying infected rats that launched a plague epidemic in the city, which raged sporadically for five years before it was subdued. Chase, a reporter for the Wall Street Journal, argues in this engaging narrative that social, cultural and psychological issues prevented public health officials from curtailing the outbreak. Relying on published sources, diaries and letters, Chase shows how the disease first hit Chinatown and explains that most San Franciscans denied the outbreak, while others blamed the city's Chinese population (city officials hid behind worries about tourism and the city's reputation). But Chase goes beyond sociological analysis in this lively work and focuses on the players. While the first public health official assigned to stem the epidemic, Joseph Kinyoun, was an innovative scientist, Chase shows how he lacked the strategy and tact necessary for the task-his plan to quarantine Chinatown caused as many problems as it solved. Only when Rupert Blue, a new official, was assigned to the case after a second outbreak five years later, was the epidemic quashed. Avoiding pedantry and tediousness, Chase tells a story that highlights the true nature of epidemics-and how employing a combination of acceptance, perseverance and diplomacy are key to solving them. As she notes in her final pages, the parallels with the AIDS crisis are striking, and the lessons worth salting away for any future epidemics.. First Edition. Hard Cover. New/As New. 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall.

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