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The Rise of Coronaviruses and the Search for a Cure
September 1, 2022
Thanks to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, coronaviruses are part of our popular consciousness. But prior to 2020, they weren't a hot topic for scientific investigation. Epidemiologist Werb (City of Omens) shares the story of Ralph Baric, a virologist who began studying the coronavirus family in the 1980s, when the field was best described as a "scientific backwater." Baric's concerns about species-to-species transmission came to fruition during the SARS outbreak of 2003 and the MERS outbreak of 2012, and Werb chronicles the scramble to unlock the genomes of these deadly viruses in order to find a cure. This foundational understanding of the coronavirus genome gave researchers the ability to quickly respond to COVID-19. In addition, research on mRNA vaccines as a response to these earlier coronavirus outbreaks hastened the development of the COVID-19 vaccines. The sobering conclusion? It's a matter of when--not if--the next coronavirus makes the jump from animals to humans. Jason Culp's steady, measured narration helps listeners navigate the complex material, highlighting the tension, excitement, and drama of scientific discovery. VERDICT A well-presented book on an all-too-timely topic; suggest to readers who enjoy titles by David Quammen.--Nanette Donohue
Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
Starred review from January 3, 2022
Epidemiologist Werb (City of Omens) takes a page-turning and unsettling look at the history of coronaviruses. Working to “put boundaries on our anxiety” by placing Covid-19 in its scientific and historical context, he writes that coronaviruses are nothing new, but before 2003, were only known to cause mild colds. That changed with that year’s SARS epidemic, which claimed hundreds of lives. Werb covers the scientists who studied coronaviruses in obscurity with minimal funding—Ralph Baric, for example, devoted himself to analyzing the potential adaptability of coronaviruses in the 1980s and found that they could evolve to thrive in a new species very rapidly. The implications of that finding, Werb notes, are reflected in the current state of affairs, when the ever-increasing “encroachment of humans into the habitats of animals that harbor coronaviruses” explains why “the first two decades of the twenty-first century have seen more novel human pathogens emerge than across the entire twentieth century.” Werb describes doctors working toward an outlook that views animal, human, and environmental health as interconnected, and the light he sheds on scientists whose work has gone largely under the radar makes for a moving account. This is a unique and valuable addition to the expanding body of work on Covid-19.
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