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27 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A fascinating book of amazing medical oddities
This book is the one to read if you want to know more about spontaneous combustion, snakes living as parasites in the human stomach, two-headed people, tailed men, giants and dwarfs, and Julia Pastrana the Nondescript. The chapter on premature burial is particularly ghoulish and gruesome, and seems to have inspired a very good TV documentary on this subject, recently...
Published on April 16, 1999

versus
3.0 out of 5 stars tediously written
This book is assigned in one of my classes and it is simply excruciating to read. Bondeson manages to kill subjects for me that I had been excited to read about (Mary Toft & spontaneous human combustion, for example). If you enjoy superfluous detail, tedium, and a moralizing tone (or can withstand them because you're very, very interested in physical human anomaly),then...
Published 8 months ago by SeldomSelden


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27 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A fascinating book of amazing medical oddities, April 16, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: A Cabinet of Medical Curiosities: A Compendium of the Odd, the Bizarre, and the Unexpected (Paperback)
This book is the one to read if you want to know more about spontaneous combustion, snakes living as parasites in the human stomach, two-headed people, tailed men, giants and dwarfs, and Julia Pastrana the Nondescript. The chapter on premature burial is particularly ghoulish and gruesome, and seems to have inspired a very good TV documentary on this subject, recently sent on the Discovery Channel. The author is obviously a medical scientist, but he has the rare talent of writing in a way that appeals to the general reader. Stylish, well written and with lots of amazing illustrations, this book is well worth its price.
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15 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A well written interesting read!, October 7, 2003
By A Customer
I do not think this is the type of book you want to buy if you are looking for a book with alot of photos of "freaks". This is a book that describes amazing things that people once believed and then it gives some evidence as to whether or not it really happened. I bought a whole bunch of books related to medical curiousities and "freaks" and I find this one to be the most interesting out of all of them. It is so well written that it teaches you alot about folklore and history without boring you. In fact it is quite a page turner and I often have a hard time putting it down! I've read it over and over again.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Curious Indeed, April 16, 2007
By 
Polkadotty (Mountains of Western North Carolina) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Cabinet of Medical Curiosities: A Compendium of the Odd, the Bizarre, and the Unexpected (Paperback)
A compilation of some very interesting people and unexplained syndromes / phenomenon. Spontaneous human combustion, premature burial, bosom serpents (live animals taking up residence in the human body), the lousy disease which strikingly resembles today's Morgellon's scare, tailed people, giants, dwarfs, the two-headed boy of Bengal (whom today would have easily been rendered single by a simple operation), and two women of note, one who duped the most respected physicians of the day by apparently breeding "rabbits," and the tragic, touching story of bearded lady Julia Pastrana who suffered from two separate genetic disorders. Julia was a lovely woman outside of her appearance, and the way in which her life, and that of her newborn son, and especially their deaths were mishandled is criminal. The author writes in a kind, evenhanded tone that shows a respect for his subject matter and the intelligence of his readers. This book contains plenty of first-hand accounts and historical data which adds great interest and welcome factual background. I thoroughly enjoyed this book and recommend it to anyone with an interest in medicine and the strange ways nature and genes can combine. Note: The author mentions Gould and Pyle's ANOMALIES AND CURIOSITIES OF MEDICINE, published in 1897, as his inspiration for this book. This is available in its entirety on-line and is a riveting read.
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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Remarkable Medical Curiosities Brilliantly Displayed, April 13, 2002
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This review is from: A Cabinet of Medical Curiosities: A Compendium of the Odd, the Bizarre, and the Unexpected (Paperback)
In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries (and even more recently), medical and natural history museums combined elements of science and folklore with an infatuation for the bizarre and grotesque. Thus, they were often likened to the old-time "cabinet of curiosities", displays of disparate and unusual artifacts which bore no relationship to one another. A visitor to these museums often saw things which, in later years, became the staple of carnival side shows.

In "A Cabinet of Medical Curiosities", Jan Bondeson, a British physician who also holds a doctorate in experimental medicine, has written a fascinating and brilliantly executed textual analogue to the cabinet of curiousities. In successive chapters, Bondeson details, among other curiousities, the histories of spontaneous human combustion, apparent death and premature burial, maternal impressions (the belief that what a pregnant woman sees and experiences can cause corresponding alterations in the unborn fetus), and people with tails. Bondeson tells true, and not so true, stories of dwarfs and giants. He relates the story of Mary Toft, the English woman who, in 1726, was believed to have given birth to seventeen rabbits. And, of course, such a compendium of marvels would not be complete without a bearded lady--in this case, Bondeson narrates the remarkable life story of Julie Pastrana, who made appearances throughout the world in the mid-nineteenth century and whose mummified body (along with the mummified corpse of her infant child) continued to draw crowds at fairs and carnivals many years after her death.

While these topics may seem grotesque, even repulsive, Bondeson writes with deep feeling for his human subjects and a wry sense of humor for the foibles of his sometimes credulous profession. He also integrates these seemingly freakish and disparate topics into remarkably lucid and informative discussions of their place in the medical, scientific, religious, and literary discourse of their times.

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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Remarkable Medical Curiosities Brilliantly Displayed, July 9, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: A Cabinet of Medical Curiosities: A Compendium of the Odd, the Bizarre, and the Unexpected (Paperback)
In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries (and even more recently), medical and natural history museums combined elements of science and folklore with an infatuation for the bizarre and grotesque. Thus, they were often likened to the old-time "cabinet of curiosities", displays of disparate and unusual artifacts which bore no relationship to one another. A visitor to these museums often saw things which, in later years, became the staple of carnival side shows.

In "A Cabinet of Medical Curiosities", Jan Bondeson, a British physician who also holds a doctorate in experimental medicine, has written a fascinating and brilliantly executed textual analogue to the cabinet of curiousities. In successive chapters, Bondeson details, among other curiousities, the histories of spontaneous human combustion, apparent death and premature burial, maternal impressions (the belief that what a pregnant woman sees and experiences can cause corresponding alterations in the unborn fetus), and people with tails. Bondeson tells true, and not so true, stories of dwarfs and giants. He relates the story of Mary Toft, the English woman who, in 1726, was believed to have given birth to seventeen rabbits. And, of course, such a compendium of marvels would not be complete without a bearded lady--in this case, Bondeson narrates the remarkable life story of Julie Pastrana, who made appearances throughout the world in the mid-nineteenth century and whose mummified body (along with the mummified corpse of her infant child) continued to draw crowds at fairs and carnivals many years after her death.

While these topics may seem grotesque, even repulsive, Bondeson writes with deep feeling for his human subjects and a wry sense of humor for the foibles of his sometimes credulous profession. He also integrates these seemingly freakish and disparate topics into remarkably lucid and informative discussions of their place in the medical, scientific, religious, and literary discourse of their times.

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3.0 out of 5 stars tediously written, May 7, 2011
This review is from: A Cabinet of Medical Curiosities: A Compendium of the Odd, the Bizarre, and the Unexpected (Paperback)
This book is assigned in one of my classes and it is simply excruciating to read. Bondeson manages to kill subjects for me that I had been excited to read about (Mary Toft & spontaneous human combustion, for example). If you enjoy superfluous detail, tedium, and a moralizing tone (or can withstand them because you're very, very interested in physical human anomaly),then consider this book. I, however, have two more chapters read for my final, and well--just kill me now.
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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Well researched but a difficult read at times, September 29, 2008
By 
F. Hussain (Peoria Ilinois) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: A Cabinet of Medical Curiosities: A Compendium of the Odd, the Bizarre, and the Unexpected (Paperback)
The book is very well researched, however , it is not something you can sit in your armchair and enjoy reading. There is a lot of minute detail , particularly with names and dates.

I was expecting more discussion about the medical side of things, but most was a historical account of events. Eventually I had to skip a few of the chapters that did not seem interesting.
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11 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A Cabinet Of Medical Curiosities, June 15, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: A Cabinet of Medical Curiosities: A Compendium of the Odd, the Bizarre, and the Unexpected (Paperback)
"A Cabinet Of Medical Curiosities" is an interesting book. I expected better photos, not hand drawings.
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A Cabinet of Medical Curiosities: A Compendium of the Odd, the Bizarre, and the Unexpected
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