angrzy's review against another edition

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4.0

Despite not being a fan of nonfiction books, Survival of the Sickest was a very engaging read. The structure of each idea being a single, separate chapter was presented in a captivating and manner that was easy to understand. The ideas of hemochromatosis, type 1 diabetes and methylation's connections to past and modern disease were thought-provoking and provided a lengthy classroom discussion.

kaitlynkitchen's review against another edition

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funny informative medium-paced

4.0

thelaurelwreathcrowned's review against another edition

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informative inspiring fast-paced

3.5

kate_birdie's review against another edition

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informative slow-paced

3.25

captaincocanutty's review against another edition

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informative lighthearted fast-paced

3.25

halhenn's review against another edition

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informative reflective medium-paced

3.0

rampaginglibrarian's review against another edition

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3.0

I think my original interest in this book came about with my hypothesis that some people (perhaps me in particular) might have stronger immune systems than others simply in the fact that they have weaker immune systems than everyone else. Ultralong oxymoron? Let me try and explain: I seem to have a continual cold (especially in winter) or a cold that comes, gets better for a day or two, and then returns. My mother shows constant concern for this and is always urging me to a doctor (said doctors can never do much~neither can airbourne or Theraflu) but of course i am constantly exposed to the public and every virus that comes their way (basically every virus that comes into our community~especially since those lovely people who are too sick to go into work must come into the library to pick up their movies to keep them entertained at home.) Anyway, i'm known to have a weak immune system, but i sometimes wonder if my immune isn't very strong for fighting off all those viruses it gets and not getting any major complications~perhaps when the major superbug hits i will have already developed and immunity to it because i will have already had one of its original permutations. It's a theory anyway...
Survival of the Sickest: a medical maverick discovers why we need disease isn't quite so much a defense of my theory as it is a rather fascinating study of evolutionary epidemiology (among other things~and perhaps if i had read the subtitle before placing the hold i might have picked up on that~but maybe i read a review and had an entirely different reason for wanting to read the book in the first place~one never knows these things). The medical maverick of the subtitle is Dr. Sharon Maolem (Jonathan Prince is co-credited~a not-so-much ghost writer?) The reading is pretty easygoing, if you are new to the subject area it is incredibly interesting~if you are not new to the subject area there might not be that much new information here but the presentation is such that might still come across a few "a-has" or "I hadn't thought of that one".
His basic premise is that evolution and the climatic conditions of our ancestry contributed to our genetic heritage (perhaps not such a huge intellectual leap) but that the genetic predisposition to certain diseases such as diabetes was an advantage in colder climates such as Northern Europe or Scandinavia where increased sugar levels might be a protection against the cold.
I'm not sure how much of a "maverick" Dr. Moalem is (a Ph. D. in human physiology and in the "emerging fields of neurogenetics and evolutionary medicine"), much of this has been at least postulated before; but he does an excellent job of synthesizing it for the general reader (i enjoyed it anyway.)

misspudding's review against another edition

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4.0

Great read. It was pretty quick to read and really interesting. I just wish it had been a little more dense and his theories had been expanded upon with more research from other theories.

bougies_et_etoiles's review against another edition

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4.0

Amazing book to read for anyone interested in biology and evolution.

methanojen's review against another edition

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An interesting read that raises many good questions about our evolutionary heritage, if at times the writing is trite, repetitive and likely overly simplistic.

My favorite quote: "Your genes are the evolutionary legacy of every organism that came before you, beginning with your parents and winding all the way back to the very beginning. Somewhere in your genetic code is the tale of every plague, every predator, every parasite, and every planetary upheaval your ancestors managed to survive."