book data
221 ratings, 3.83 average rating, 69 reviews
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published
September 11th 2007
(first published 2006)
by Random House Trade Paperbacks
binding
Paperback, 336 pages
isbn
081297252X
(isbn13: 9780812972528)
description
For two hundred years a noble Venetian family has suffered from an inherited disease that strikes their members in middle age, stealing their sleep, e...more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 400)
bookshelves:
audiobook,
science
Read in November, 2007
This is based upon the audio download from [www.audible.com].
Narrated by: Grover Gardner
Like a smart consumer in the market for electronics, appliances or cars, I research my purchases by looking up recommendations on Consumer Reports. When I am looking for a good book to read, I turn to my trusted source for reviews—Goodreads. Based on member recommendations, I know going in that the book I choose will more than likely receive a higher than average rating from me. Y...more
Narrated by: Grover Gardner
Like a smart consumer in the market for electronics, appliances or cars, I research my purchases by looking up recommendations on Consumer Reports. When I am looking for a good book to read, I turn to my trusted source for reviews—Goodreads. Based on member recommendations, I know going in that the book I choose will more than likely receive a higher than average rating from me. Y...more
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Read in October, 2006
I'll try not to give 5-star ratings willy-nilly, but this was a pretty amazing family biography, spanning centuries' worth of generations and shedding light on a variety of subjects through the lens of this bizarre and incredibly rare genetic disease. Agriculture, attitudes toward disease, the relationship between science and doctors, the mysterious biological function of sleep, international politics, economic competition and, of course, personal profiles of the afflicted. The drama of the curr...more
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Read in July, 2008
A fascinating collection of stories and medical cases about various inflictions ranging from a Venetian family whose generational insomnia led to the death of multiple family members to case studies of those affected with Mad Cow Disease. A very interesting look at Prion and how its symptoms are often misdiagnosed as Alzheimer’s disease. A clear history of Prion diseases and our attempts to understand them have been given in this book.
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Read in December, 2007
This account of prion-based spongiform encephelopathic diseases covers a lot of ground: the Italian family of the title suffering from FFI (fatal familial insomnia), the mysterious epidemic of kuru among the Fore tribe of New Guinea, eventually linked to the practice of eating their dead ancestors' brains, the rare genetically transmitted Creuzfeldt-Jacob disease (CJD), various animal spongiform encephelopathies, from scrapie in sheep to mad cow disease to chronic wasting disease in deer. All of...more
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nonfiction,
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Read in November, 2007
recommended to Kate by:
Mom
I'll never end up reading this whole book, because I don't own it and I'm not interested enough to buy it. But I read about a third of my mother's copy while visiting, and the subject matter is very interesting. It's about prion diseases - the most famous of which is mad cow, but scrapie (the disease that makes sheep think their backs are so itchy that they rub them against posts until they are raw (and then they die)) and Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease are others.
The hereditary disease...more
The hereditary disease...more
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This book will scare you - I lived right next to the Cherry Hill Race Track where some of the bad beef was! It explains where things like Mad Cow disease comes from in a way that anyone can understand. It's a scientific book wrapped around this family that has a gene that doesn't allow them to sleep after they turn 50-60. Those that have the gene die after weeks without sleep. The book links the diesase with other brain wasting diseases while telling amazing stories.
I think everyone...more
I think everyone...more
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Read in November, 2008
For those who are ready to embrace their inner medical nerdiness, this is will be a very interesting read. And for those who are not, well, you might find the title the most catchy part of the book (because it does get a bit technical at times). The title only refers to Fetal Familial Insomnia but the book covers other prion diseases as well, including, kuru, mad cow disease, scrapies, CJD, etc. It delves into the history of research about prions, the big egos of the discoverers, the response of...more
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in sharing the story of an italian family beset by a strange medical illness that causes insomnia and eventually death, the author also explains the history of that rare class of illness known as prion diseases. much is still unknown about them, but he goes through the history of how what we do know was discovered. prion diseases, like scrapie in sheep and mad cow disease in humans and cattle, are caused by a malformed protein. the author explains things pretty well this book does get dry in ...more
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This moved a little slowly, but I found the science of it really interesting. I had read a little about prion diseases last summer in the book Genome, but this was more literary and enjoyable. For those who watch House, this is a good choice.
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Read in December, 2007
A scary book about prion diseases with "mad cow disease" being one of them. The book starts with a family that has fatal familial insomnia an inherited disease that has been passed down from generation to generation since the 1700's. The family is not aware of the cause until recently when prion research shows that it is caused by a mis-folded protein. The book goes on to talk about scrapie in sheep and the passage of this disease to cows in Britain because of the habit of feeding b...more
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bookshelves:
our-mysterious-minds
recommends it for: Anyone who eats
Read in July, 2008
recommended to Sarazen by:
TVrecommends it for: Anyone who eats
A sad and disturbing tale, this book chronicles the story of a family in Italy dying of a rare form of fatal insomnia. From there it segways to mad cow disease, and unravels the twisted thread that binds many odd incurable horrifying diseases, prions.
Knowing the details, prions are scary. Given the response of the British Government to the Mad Cow epidemic, not to mention the current tomato/salmonella problems in the US, this book makes it very clear the serious problems lurking in o...more
Knowing the details, prions are scary. Given the response of the British Government to the Mad Cow epidemic, not to mention the current tomato/salmonella problems in the US, this book makes it very clear the serious problems lurking in o...more
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Read in December, 2008
Fascinating, frightening account of prion disease centering around a family afflicted with FFI (Fatal Familial Insomnia).
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Read in May, 2007
Max's text elegantly weaves together several stories about prion diseases, without losing track of the central theme: that prion diseases are protein-based (i.e. no nucleic acids required for transmission) and transmitted via genetics, infection, or by accident -- spuriously -- the last case being a questionable category for obscurely transmitted infection. The text is lucid and engaging but occassionally discards accuracy for ease of reading. Max reiterates how questions about protein foldin...more
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Read in October, 2007
This book is a thorough look at a new class of diseases - prion diseases, in which a protein in the body misforms, replicates itself and causes all sorts of problems. These diseases are some of the most complex and difficult mysteries doctors and medical researchers have had to solve. Because they are generated in a person's own body, they are all the more disturbing. I would have enjoyed a final summary chapter with steps people can take to protect against these terrifying diseases (being caref...more
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Read in January, 2009
This has been a very interesting read, if not a bit slow.
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Read in January, 2008
This book scared the crap out of me! it is really not about the family with Fatal Familial Insomnia (a prion disease that is inhereted), it's about contageous prion diseases (like mad cow) and since we know so little about these diseases, it's possible there are MANY more people dying of them than we know about. One of the studies hilighted showed that 4 out of 46 people that die of 'alzheimers disease' actually are dying of prion diseases we don't know about! And prion diseases cannot be killed...more
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Read in December, 2006
This book takes a look at a family that had several generations die from a rare "sleeping-sickness". It is an interesting look into the evolution of medical research and knowledge using this disease as an example. From how the medical community first becomes interested in investigating, to connecting it to other similar medical problems (in this case "mad cow" disease), it is not always an easy read. Unfortunately there is no cure yet either, so if you need a satisfactory ...more
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Read in June, 2007
recommends it for:
Ciro
Wow. Anyone interested in science would like this read. It's about prion disease--which effects the mind and has been linked, by the author, to a disease that manifested itself in the brains of an Italian family over the last two centuries. The disease breaks down people's ability to sleep. They are actually starved of sleep until their bodies can no longer function and they die. Prion disease is also linked to Bovine diseases ("mad cow" and "scrapie") and another rare diseas...more
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Read in April, 2007
Max writes an interesting history of the discovery of prion diseases, beginning with an Italian family that suffers a genetic disposition to a fatal insomnia. He covers pretty much the whole history I guess - scrapie, kuru, BSE, and C-JD. He spends a lot of time explaining how agricultural practices made scrapie, and then BSE, much more widespread than they should have been, and how regulatory inaction may have led to many people becoming infected with prions from BSE cattle. I learned a lot.
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