
The Mystery of the Exploding Teeth and Other Curiosities from the History of Medicine
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Narrated by:
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Rupert Farley
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Thomas Morris
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By:
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Thomas Morris
About this listen
Random House presents the audiobook edition of The Mystery of the Exploding Teeth and Other Curiosities from the History of Medicine by Thomas Morris, read by Thomas Morris and Rupert Farley.
· A mysterious epidemic of dental explosions.
· A teenage boy who got his wick stuck in a candlestick.
· A remarkable woman who, like a human fountain, spurted urine from virtually every orifice.
These are just a few of the anecdotal gems that have until now lain undiscovered in medical journals for centuries. This fascinating collection of historical curiosities explores some of the strangest cases that have perplexed doctors across the world.
From seventeenth-century Holland to Tsarist Russia, from rural Canada to a whaler in the Pacific, many are monuments to human stupidity – such as the sailor who swallowed dozens of penknives to amuse his shipmates, or the chemistry student who in 1850 arrived at a hospital in New York with his penis trapped inside a bottle, having unwisely decided to relieve himself into a vessel containing highly reactive potassium. Others demonstrate exceptional surgical ingenuity long before the advent of anaesthesia – such as a daring nineteenth-century operation to remove a metal fragment from beneath a conscious patient’s heart. We also hear of the weird, often hilarious remedies employed by physicians of yore – from crow’s vomit to port-wine enemas – the hazards of such everyday objects as cucumbers and false teeth, and miraculous recovery from apparently terminal injuries.
Blending fascinating history with lacerating wit, The Mystery of the Exploding Teeth will take you on a tour of some of the funniest, strangest and most wince-inducing corners of medical history.
The delivery is similar to that of Angus Deayton in his HIGNFY heyday, and I loved the book. I didn't find the explanations or footnotes a problem: they melded well with the main body of the book. If I have a criticism, it is that when incidents based in France were quoted, the narrator did not seem to realise that "M" in front of a French name is not an initial but a title and should be pronounced "Monsieur".
Definitely my sort of book.
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Very enjoyable to listen to
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More books like this please!
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Another good commute book
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Hilarious
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well constructed
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Good
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As the title suggests this book brings together a while host of bizarre medical trauma cases or medical mystery cases along with their cleverly accurate solutions and conclusions as discovered in the 18th and 19th Centuries when physicians and surgeons did not have access to the scanners and X ray machines or clever lab tests of the 20th and 21st centuries.
One thing is for sure whilst this book is not gory it will leave you forever grateful that you were born in this era rather than in the 1700 and 1800s. Yikes!!!
Absolutely fascinating and thoroughly entertaining
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Made me weep with laughter
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Worth listening to 10 times
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