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The Great Influenza: The Epic Story of the Deadliest Plague In History
 
 
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The Great Influenza: The Epic Story of the Deadliest Plague In History (Hardcover)

by John M. Barry (Author) "ON SEPTEMBER 12, 1876, the crowd overflowing the auditorium of Baltimore's Academy of Music was in a mood of hopeful excitement, but excitement without frivolity..." (more)
Key Phrases: unaired interview, pneumonia commission, influenza bacilli, United States, New York, Rockefeller Institute (more...)
4.1 out of 5 stars  (175 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
In 1918, a plague swept across the world virtually without warning, killing healthy young adults as well as vulnerable infants and the elderly. Hospitals and morgues were quickly overwhelmed; in Philadelphia, 4,597 people died in one week alone and bodies piled up on the streets to be carted off to mass graves. But this was not the dreaded Black Death-it was "only influenza." In this sweeping history, Barry (Rising Tide) explores how the deadly confluence of biology (a swiftly mutating flu virus that can pass between animals and humans) and politics (President Wilson's all-out war effort in WWI) created conditions in which the virus thrived, killing more than