From a renowned surgeon and historian with five decades of experience comes a remarkable history of surgery’s development—spanning the Stone Age to the present day—blending meticulous medical studies with lively and skillful storytelling.
There are not many events in life that can be as simultaneously life-frightening and life-saving as a surgical operation. Yet, in America, tens-of-millions of major surgical procedures are performed annually but few of us pause to consider the magnitude of these figures because we have such inherent confidence in surgeons. And, despite passionate debates about health care and the endless fascination with surgical procedures, most of us have no idea how surgeons came to be because the story of surgery has never been fully told.
Now, Empire of the Scalpel elegantly reveals the fascinating history of surgery’s evolution from its earliest roots in Europe through its rise to scientific and social dominance in the United States.
From the sixteenth-century saga of Andreas Vesalius and his crusade to accurately describe human anatomy while appeasing the conservative clergy who clamored for his burning at the stake, to the hard-to-believe story of late-nineteenth-century surgeons’ apathy to Joseph Lister’s innovation of antisepsis and how this indifference led to thousands of unnecessary surgical deaths, Empire of the Scalpel is both a global history and a uniquely American tale.
You will discover how in the twentieth century the United States achieved surgical world supremacy heralded by the Nobel Prize–winning, seemingly impossible feat of transplanting a kidney and how the heart-lung machine was developed, along with much more.
Today, the list of possible operations is almost infinite—from knee and hip replacement to heart bypass and transplants to fat reduction and rhinoplasty—and Rutkow draws on his five-decade career to show us how we got here.
Authoritative, captivating, and comprehensive, Empire of the Scalpel portrays the evolution of surgery in all its dramatic and life-enhancing complexity and shows that its history is truly one awe-inspiring triumph after another.
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“Rutkow…[reveals] the rugged, difficult, obstinate characters that propelled the field’s advance during a heroic age of medicine.”
— San Francisco Chronicle
“This survey—by turns fascinating and grisly—is nothing less than a history of the modern world.”
— New York Times Book Review“Unexpected and fascinating perspectives not only on the operating table but also on war, science, society, and human behavior.”
— American Scholar“A fascinating, well-rendered story of how the once-impossible became a daily reality.”
— Kirkus Reviews (starred review)Ira Rutkow is a general surgeon and historian of American medicine. He also holds a doctorate of public health from Johns Hopkins University. He has written several encyclopedic works on surgical history, including Surgery: An Illustrated History, which was named a New York Times Notable Book of the Year. He is also the author of Seeking the Cure, James A. Garfield, and Bleeding Blue and Gray.
Gibson Frazier is an audiobook narrator and an actor who has performed with such distinguished off-Broadway theater companies as the Civilians, Les Freres Corbusier, the Vineyard, the Cherry Lane, New Georges, the Foundry, and Clubbed Thumb. He is a founding member of the Los Angeles–based theater company Buffalo Nights. He has been named as one of the Village Voice’s favorite actors.