THE ANTHRAX LETTERS: A MEDICAL DETECTIVE STORY BY LEONARD A. COLE

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By saving The Anthrax Letters: A Medical Detective Story By Leonard A. Cole in the device, the means you read will likewise be much simpler. Open it and also start reading The Anthrax Letters: A Medical Detective Story By Leonard A. Cole, basic. This is reason we recommend this The Anthrax Letters: A Medical Detective Story By Leonard A. Cole in soft data. It will not disrupt your time to get the book. On top of that, the on the internet heating and cooling unit will additionally alleviate you to look The Anthrax Letters: A Medical Detective Story By Leonard A. Cole it, even without going someplace. If you have link net in your office, home, or gizmo, you can download and install The Anthrax Letters: A Medical Detective Story By Leonard A. Cole it directly. You could not likewise wait to receive the book The Anthrax Letters: A Medical Detective Story By Leonard A. Cole to send by the vendor in various other days.

From Publishers Weekly On October 5, 2001, Bob Stevens, a 63-year-old photo editor for the tabloid newspaper the Sun, became the first confirmed bioterrorism fatality in the U.S. Over the next several weeks, nearly two dozen people were diagnosed with anthrax, five of whom died. Disentangling a coherent story from the snarl of conflicting reports, multi-agency responses, blaring headlines, empty leads and the shaky scientific data surrounding the anthrax attacks is no simple task, which makes Cole's accomplished book all the more impressive. As an expert on the intersection of politics and terrorism, Cole (The Eleventh Plague) takes the reader on a captivating, no-nonsense tour of America's public health system, where physicians, scientists and administrators work tirelessly to establish protocols and policies, task forces and education programs, emergency response strategies and stockpiles of vital medicines to safeguard the country from a potentially catastrophic bioterror event. The book also supplies the chilling details that the short-lived media flareup failed to convey-such as the durability of anthrax spores, which can lie dormant but remain lethal for hundreds of years; the contamination of massive postal facilities that remain unsafe even after multimillion-dollar clean-up efforts; the difficulties involved in diagnosing many anthrax cases, which can display ambiguous symptoms; and the persistent, residual effects of the disease. Without even a hint of sensationalism, this disquieting but hopeful book skillfully zeros in on the most crucial issues and scientific advances as well as the heroic individuals who averted disaster while under the intense glare of public scrutiny. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc. Review "... [a] thoroughly researched, detailed, and fascinating book... a well-written forensic mystery..." -Journal of the American Medical Association, July 21, 2004 "...absolutely riveting. ... [Cole is] a superb writer and his book reads like a fine-tuned suspense novel." -- DingBat Magazine, December 2003

"...deliver[s] all the drama of a modern-day thriller... offers the most complete look available at the still-unsolved mystery..." -- Roll Call, October 14, 2003 "...excellent insights ... fascinating discussion of the attacks and how they will influence our level of preparedness for the future." -- Library Journal, November 1, 2003 "...interesting and genuinely informative reading..." -- Bulletin of the World Health Organization, January 2004 "...offers us a wealth of detail on the case -- even as it reminds us how little we know." -- James P. Pinkerton in Newsday, October 7, 2003 "...one of the most authoritative of the recent crop of books on the anthrax letters... undeniably intriguing." -- The Washington Times, November 16, 2003 "...vivid portraits of the bacteria, those who were infected, and those whose job it was to counter the threat." -- Kirkus Reviews, August 2003 "An excellent job... Probably the most detailed book on the subject. ... This book is a must." -Counterterrorism Homeland Security Reports, 2004 "[Cole’s] storytelling abilities rank with those of Richard Preston, without ever losing sight of the science." -- Lancet Journal of Infectious Diseases, January 1, 2004 From the Inside Flap "The anthrax attacks of 2001 took five lives and terrified a nation. Leonard Cole assumed the massive task of considering how these unprecedented attacks touched us individually and collectively, and he skillfully put them in a context that will help us understand how they unfolded and how we might address the bioterrorist threat in the future. The Anthrax Letters is a compelling human story told with scientific integrity." -- Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle (D-SD) "The Anthrax Letters is a terrific read. The book is a masterful piece of reporting, written with absolute strength and clarity, and the background research Cole has done is slam-on right, impressive in its detail and insight. Cole talked to all kinds of sources no other reporter was able to reach, and he turned the research into a first rate work of narrative describing the first major bioterror event the modern world has seen." -- Richard Preston, author of The Demon in the Freezer "The most effective antidote to biological terrorism is information. Only frank discussion of our vulnerabilities and preparedness will inoculate us against the most contagious agent we face: fear. Leonard Cole makes an invaluable contribution to that discussion with this in-depth look at the people, places and events involved in the 2001 mail-borne anthrax attacks. When the final chapter is written, and the case is solved, this book will have helped point the way to a safer America." -- Congressman Christopher Shays (R-CT), Chairman of the Subcommittee on National Security, Emerging Threats, and International Relations "Luck perhaps has been most accurately defined as where the road of preparation crosses the road of opportunity. For me, these two paths met when I encountered an ill Bob Stevens on October 2, 2001. Leonard Cole's chronicle of the anthrax attacks records with detailed accuracy

the medical epidemiological and investigative aspects of these historical events. His narrative is fascinating, insightful, and thought-provoking." -- Larry M. Bush, M.D.

THE ANTHRAX LETTERS: A MEDICAL DETECTIVE STORY BY LEONARD A. COLE PDF

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THE ANTHRAX LETTERS: A MEDICAL DETECTIVE STORY BY LEONARD A. COLE PDF

At 2:00am on October 2, 2001, Robert Stevens entered a hospital emergency room. Feverish, nauseated, and barely conscious, no one knew what was making him sick. It was the doctors and public health officials who solved this medical mystery. Stevens was the first fatal victim of bioterrorism in America. The events of September 11th and the anthrax attacks that followed only three weeks later were horrifying. Many of us felt we were living in a world gone mad. Already shaken by the images of jetliners deliberately flown into the Twin Towers at the World Trade Center, we were soon scared to open our mail. No longer could we look forward to birthday wishes or holiday postcards. We couldn’t even safely face the delivery of our monthly bills. We had now become literally afraid of the microbial menace that could be lurking in our mailboxes. This time terror had struck close to homeâ€"to everyone’s home. But behind the panic and the politics was a key line of defense. While the police and FBI frantically investigated a crime, there were other professionals at work, conducting their own painstaking inquiry â€" medical and scientific detectives hot on the trail of deadly organisms deliberately set loose in the postal system. Modern heroes in a quickly changing world, the public health officials, physicians, researchers, and scientists who staff our hospitals, clinics, and laboratories will be the first responders on the scene of any future biowarfare event. Conducting his own detective work, bioterrorism expert Leonard Cole has composed a series of fascinating stories that get to the heart of all the noisy sound bytes and hysterical headlines. Cole is the only person outside law enforcement to have interviewed every one of the surviving inhalation-anthrax victims, along with the relatives, friends, and associates of those who died, as well as the public health officials, scientists, researchers, hospital workers, and treating physicians â€" indeed, anyone who has something of value to add to the story. Speaking through their voices, the narrative reflects the tension and emotions stirred by the events from the fall of 2001. Fast paced and riveting, this minute-by-minute chronicle of the anthrax attacks recounts more than a history of recent current events, it uncovers the untold and perhaps even more important story of how scientists, doctors, and researchers perform life-saving work under intense pressure and public scrutiny. The Anthrax Letters amply demonstrates how vulnerable America and the world really were in 2001. It also shows quite clearly how scientific research promises to strengthen our ability to address the challenges we must meet in the future.

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Sales Rank: #1712844 in Books Published on: 2003-11-01 Original language: English Number of items: 1

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Dimensions: 9.28" h x .90" w x 6.32" l, 1.16 pounds Binding: Hardcover 280 pages

From Publishers Weekly On October 5, 2001, Bob Stevens, a 63-year-old photo editor for the tabloid newspaper the Sun, became the first confirmed bioterrorism fatality in the U.S. Over the next several weeks, nearly two dozen people were diagnosed with anthrax, five of whom died. Disentangling a coherent story from the snarl of conflicting reports, multi-agency responses, blaring headlines, empty leads and the shaky scientific data surrounding the anthrax attacks is no simple task, which makes Cole's accomplished book all the more impressive. As an expert on the intersection of politics and terrorism, Cole (The Eleventh Plague) takes the reader on a captivating, no-nonsense tour of America's public health system, where physicians, scientists and administrators work tirelessly to establish protocols and policies, task forces and education programs, emergency response strategies and stockpiles of vital medicines to safeguard the country from a potentially catastrophic bioterror event. The book also supplies the chilling details that the short-lived media flareup failed to convey-such as the durability of anthrax spores, which can lie dormant but remain lethal for hundreds of years; the contamination of massive postal facilities that remain unsafe even after multimillion-dollar clean-up efforts; the difficulties involved in diagnosing many anthrax cases, which can display ambiguous symptoms; and the persistent, residual effects of the disease. Without even a hint of sensationalism, this disquieting but hopeful book skillfully zeros in on the most crucial issues and scientific advances as well as the heroic individuals who averted disaster while under the intense glare of public scrutiny. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc. Review "... [a] thoroughly researched, detailed, and fascinating book... a well-written forensic mystery..." -Journal of the American Medical Association, July 21, 2004 "...absolutely riveting. ... [Cole is] a superb writer and his book reads like a fine-tuned suspense novel." -- DingBat Magazine, December 2003 "...deliver[s] all the drama of a modern-day thriller... offers the most complete look available at the still-unsolved mystery..." -- Roll Call, October 14, 2003 "...excellent insights ... fascinating discussion of the attacks and how they will influence our level of preparedness for the future." -- Library Journal, November 1, 2003 "...interesting and genuinely informative reading..." -- Bulletin of the World Health Organization, January 2004 "...offers us a wealth of detail on the case -- even as it reminds us how little we know." -- James P. Pinkerton in Newsday, October 7, 2003 "...one of the most authoritative of the recent crop of books on the anthrax letters... undeniably intriguing." -- The Washington Times, November 16, 2003 "...vivid portraits of the bacteria, those who were infected, and those whose job it was to counter the threat." -- Kirkus Reviews, August 2003

"An excellent job... Probably the most detailed book on the subject. ... This book is a must." -Counterterrorism Homeland Security Reports, 2004 "[Cole’s] storytelling abilities rank with those of Richard Preston, without ever losing sight of the science." -- Lancet Journal of Infectious Diseases, January 1, 2004 From the Inside Flap "The anthrax attacks of 2001 took five lives and terrified a nation. Leonard Cole assumed the massive task of considering how these unprecedented attacks touched us individually and collectively, and he skillfully put them in a context that will help us understand how they unfolded and how we might address the bioterrorist threat in the future. The Anthrax Letters is a compelling human story told with scientific integrity." -- Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle (D-SD) "The Anthrax Letters is a terrific read. The book is a masterful piece of reporting, written with absolute strength and clarity, and the background research Cole has done is slam-on right, impressive in its detail and insight. Cole talked to all kinds of sources no other reporter was able to reach, and he turned the research into a first rate work of narrative describing the first major bioterror event the modern world has seen." -- Richard Preston, author of The Demon in the Freezer "The most effective antidote to biological terrorism is information. Only frank discussion of our vulnerabilities and preparedness will inoculate us against the most contagious agent we face: fear. Leonard Cole makes an invaluable contribution to that discussion with this in-depth look at the people, places and events involved in the 2001 mail-borne anthrax attacks. When the final chapter is written, and the case is solved, this book will have helped point the way to a safer America." -- Congressman Christopher Shays (R-CT), Chairman of the Subcommittee on National Security, Emerging Threats, and International Relations "Luck perhaps has been most accurately defined as where the road of preparation crosses the road of opportunity. For me, these two paths met when I encountered an ill Bob Stevens on October 2, 2001. Leonard Cole's chronicle of the anthrax attacks records with detailed accuracy the medical epidemiological and investigative aspects of these historical events. His narrative is fascinating, insightful, and thought-provoking." -- Larry M. Bush, M.D. Most helpful customer reviews 1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Return to Sender By J. Thomas "The Anthrax Letters" recounts the story fairly well but is somewhat dated and some of the authors assumptions and bias stand out. The first mailings arrived at the American Media Inc. (AMI) building in Boca Raton Florida and the previous address at the National Enquirer building. This raises the question as to where the perpetrators obtained the addresses and whether they were local. It's common knowledge that many of the 911 hijackers lived in Florida. Marwan Al Shehhi and Hamza Alghamdi lived in Del Ray about 15 minutes from AMI. A librarian, Martha Moffett is quoted because she believed Bin Laden read "The Sun", a tabloid periodical and that he would be angry with the stories that had been written about him. Never mind that photo journalist Robert Stevens, the first victim of the anthrax letters had published pictures of the drunken Bush twins and

possibly angered the leader of the so called free world. In any case the letters were mailed from Trenton, New Jersey and not Florida. Steven Hatfill, microbiologist at Fort Dietrich, MD became the first subject of the FBI's suspicion. Recently Hatfill was awarded 5.6 million dollars for the false accusations that ruined his life. The point is that while warmongers like John McCain were on TV making noise about the anthrax being produced in Iraq, the truth was that it was made in the good ol' USA. The AMES strain of anthrax was collected in Iowa and cultivated and weaponized by Battelle Labs of West Jefferson, Ohio. The silica-powdered anthrax was ionized to be easily distributed in the air. The process of coating and ionizing the anthrax is extremely difficult and dangerous and can only be done in a proper lab with proper training. Letters were sent to Senators Tom Daschle and Patrick Leahy as well as media personality Tom Brokaw. Leahy and Daschle, who were holdouts on signing the Patriot Act, signed immediately after receiving the letters. Seven years went by and now the FBI have supposedly solved the case and laid the blame of the attacks on Dr. Bruce Ivins, a microbiologist, who like Hatfill worked at Ft. Dietrich. Ivins was a specialist in research and development of bio-toxin vaccines. Days prior to his scheduled arrest Ivins overdosed on Tylenol and died. Case closed. Dr. Cole's 2004 "The Anthrax Letters" could stand a revision. 6 of 6 people found the following review helpful. Gripping, Moving, Important....A Very Significant Book By W. C HALL One great terrorism event of 2001, the attacks of September 11th, remains seared into America's national memory...as well it should. But another deadly deed, which unfolded just a few days later, seems to be rapidly receding from the foreground: the anthrax letters. In this powerful new book, Dr. Leonard Cole persuasively lays out a case why this act of bioterrorism should not be forgotten. Dr. Cole's book is, as the subtitle suggests, a true medical detective story. It took great insight and certain leaps of faith for the first health professionals who confronted this situation to recognize it for what it was. Anthrax in humans was, and fortunately, is, quite rare. And although there had been hoax letters previously claiming to contain anthrax, it had never actually been transmitted by the U.S. Mail before this incident. Thanks to exhaustive interviews with the professionals, survivors and families of the victims, Cole is able to present an almost minute-by-minute account of the appearance of the disease, the search for answers, and the aftermath. Although the public health community was the target of much criticism in the hysteria following in the immediate wake of the event, Cole suggests, and rightly so, I believe, that most of the people are truly unsung heroes. Beyond being a record of a deadly crisis, Cole poses some important questions. Are we better prepared for the next bioterrorist event? The answer is a qualified yes. The scientific and health communities seem to be better informed, and have established important networks of communication and cooperation. But what of the public at large? Here, the signs are not so hopeful. I must praise this book for another reason: its readability. Cole lays out the science in terms that are crystalline clear. He provides just enough details about people and places to make them living, flesh and blood individuals, not lifeless characters on a page. And I'm sure he practiced admirable

restraint in distilling what must have been a massive amount of research into a concise package. Too many writers these days seem to be falling victim to the "file dump" phenomenon--wanting to make sure all their hard work finds its way between covers. A worthwhile and important book.--William C. Hall 2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. Real Life Horror Story By Sharon A. Hutchinson I was drawn into this book from page 1. An intriguing and scary look into just how deadly biological weapons are, and how easy it would be to release a deadly pathogen into a population. One cannot help but sympathize with the residents of this Ural town who were unfortunate enough to breathe in the deadly spores. It is also heartbreaking to read the effects felt by family and friends of the deceased as they mourned the untimely, sudden and unexplainable deaths of their loved ones. But the most disturbing part of all is how the victims contracted the disease (though this is still up for debate) by just being in the wrong place at the wrong time, as the deadly pathogens were borne here and there by the wind. One victim happened to be out gardening while the invisible, deadly breeze swept by, while her neighbors who remained in their homes at that moment were unaffected. One comes away from reading this book with the realization of how fragile and precious life is, and how it can be ended by the vagaries of Fate. Comparing this book with others written about Anthrax is inevitable, but this publication is written from the viewpoint of the author's occupation. As an added feature, one learns about the paranoia that still continues to exist in that part of the world, and the roundabout methods the writer sometimes had to employ to fully investigate this terrible event. I give the book 4 stars because of its sometimes very academic approach, which may discourage some readers. But in this era when any country can obtain such dangerous and deadly microbes, each book on this subject is a must read in order to understand the seriousness of biological weapons and how easily this type of warfare can decimate a population. See all 20 customer reviews...

THE ANTHRAX LETTERS: A MEDICAL DETECTIVE STORY BY LEONARD A. COLE PDF

Since of this publication The Anthrax Letters: A Medical Detective Story By Leonard A. Cole is marketed by on the internet, it will certainly alleviate you not to print it. you could get the soft file of this The Anthrax Letters: A Medical Detective Story By Leonard A. Cole to save in your computer, device, as well as more tools. It depends upon your desire where as well as where you will review The Anthrax Letters: A Medical Detective Story By Leonard A. Cole One that you need to constantly keep in mind is that checking out book The Anthrax Letters: A Medical Detective Story By Leonard A. Cole will certainly never ever finish. You will have going to read other publication after completing an e-book, and also it's constantly. From Publishers Weekly On October 5, 2001, Bob Stevens, a 63-year-old photo editor for the tabloid newspaper the Sun, became the first confirmed bioterrorism fatality in the U.S. Over the next several weeks, nearly two dozen people were diagnosed with anthrax, five of whom died. Disentangling a coherent story from the snarl of conflicting reports, multi-agency responses, blaring headlines, empty leads and the shaky scientific data surrounding the anthrax attacks is no simple task, which makes Cole's accomplished book all the more impressive. As an expert on the intersection of politics and terrorism, Cole (The Eleventh Plague) takes the reader on a captivating, no-nonsense tour of America's public health system, where physicians, scientists and administrators work tirelessly to establish protocols and policies, task forces and education programs, emergency response strategies and stockpiles of vital medicines to safeguard the country from a potentially catastrophic bioterror event. The book also supplies the chilling details that the short-lived media flareup failed to convey-such as the durability of anthrax spores, which can lie dormant but remain lethal for hundreds of years; the contamination of massive postal facilities that remain unsafe even after multimillion-dollar clean-up efforts; the difficulties involved in diagnosing many anthrax cases, which can display ambiguous symptoms; and the persistent, residual effects of the disease. Without even a hint of sensationalism, this disquieting but hopeful book skillfully zeros in on the most crucial issues and scientific advances as well as the heroic individuals who averted disaster while under the intense glare of public scrutiny. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc. Review "... [a] thoroughly researched, detailed, and fascinating book... a well-written forensic mystery..." -Journal of the American Medical Association, July 21, 2004 "...absolutely riveting. ... [Cole is] a superb writer and his book reads like a fine-tuned suspense novel." -- DingBat Magazine, December 2003 "...deliver[s] all the drama of a modern-day thriller... offers the most complete look available at the still-unsolved mystery..." -- Roll Call, October 14, 2003 "...excellent insights ... fascinating discussion of the attacks and how they will influence our level of preparedness for the future." -- Library Journal, November 1, 2003

"...interesting and genuinely informative reading..." -- Bulletin of the World Health Organization, January 2004 "...offers us a wealth of detail on the case -- even as it reminds us how little we know." -- James P. Pinkerton in Newsday, October 7, 2003 "...one of the most authoritative of the recent crop of books on the anthrax letters... undeniably intriguing." -- The Washington Times, November 16, 2003 "...vivid portraits of the bacteria, those who were infected, and those whose job it was to counter the threat." -- Kirkus Reviews, August 2003 "An excellent job... Probably the most detailed book on the subject. ... This book is a must." -Counterterrorism Homeland Security Reports, 2004 "[Cole’s] storytelling abilities rank with those of Richard Preston, without ever losing sight of the science." -- Lancet Journal of Infectious Diseases, January 1, 2004 From the Inside Flap "The anthrax attacks of 2001 took five lives and terrified a nation. Leonard Cole assumed the massive task of considering how these unprecedented attacks touched us individually and collectively, and he skillfully put them in a context that will help us understand how they unfolded and how we might address the bioterrorist threat in the future. The Anthrax Letters is a compelling human story told with scientific integrity." -- Senate Minority Leader Tom Daschle (D-SD) "The Anthrax Letters is a terrific read. The book is a masterful piece of reporting, written with absolute strength and clarity, and the background research Cole has done is slam-on right, impressive in its detail and insight. Cole talked to all kinds of sources no other reporter was able to reach, and he turned the research into a first rate work of narrative describing the first major bioterror event the modern world has seen." -- Richard Preston, author of The Demon in the Freezer "The most effective antidote to biological terrorism is information. Only frank discussion of our vulnerabilities and preparedness will inoculate us against the most contagious agent we face: fear. Leonard Cole makes an invaluable contribution to that discussion with this in-depth look at the people, places and events involved in the 2001 mail-borne anthrax attacks. When the final chapter is written, and the case is solved, this book will have helped point the way to a safer America." -- Congressman Christopher Shays (R-CT), Chairman of the Subcommittee on National Security, Emerging Threats, and International Relations "Luck perhaps has been most accurately defined as where the road of preparation crosses the road of opportunity. For me, these two paths met when I encountered an ill Bob Stevens on October 2, 2001. Leonard Cole's chronicle of the anthrax attacks records with detailed accuracy the medical epidemiological and investigative aspects of these historical events. His narrative is fascinating, insightful, and thought-provoking." -- Larry M. Bush, M.D.

By saving The Anthrax Letters: A Medical Detective Story By Leonard A. Cole in the device,

the means you read will likewise be much simpler. Open it and also start reading The Anthrax Letters: A Medical Detective Story By Leonard A. Cole, basic. This is reason we recommend this The Anthrax Letters: A Medical Detective Story By Leonard A. Cole in soft data. It will not disrupt your time to get the book. On top of that, the on the internet heating and cooling unit will additionally alleviate you to look The Anthrax Letters: A Medical Detective Story By Leonard A. Cole it, even without going someplace. If you have link net in your office, home, or gizmo, you can download and install The Anthrax Letters: A Medical Detective Story By Leonard A. Cole it directly. You could not likewise wait to receive the book The Anthrax Letters: A Medical Detective Story By Leonard A. Cole to send by the vendor in various other days.

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