It lurks in the meat we eat. Undetectable, it incubates for years. It
kills by eating holes in people's brains, so that they stagger and
collapse and lose their minds. It's one hundred percent fatal. And it's
already abroad in America. Deadly Feasts reads like a Michael Crichton
thriller - but it's documented fact, bringing sober early warning of a
new threat to our very lives that every one of us needs to heed. In this
brilliant and gripping medical detective story, Pulitzer Prize-winning
author Richard Rhodes follows the daring explorations of maverick
scientists as they track the emergence of the deadly "stealth" maladies
known as prion diseases - strange new disease agents unlike any others
known on earth. Mad cow disease is one. Besides hundreds of thousands of
cattle, young people in Britain and France have already died from it -
died from eating beef. Beginning with a cannibal feast in New Guinea
only a few decades ago that killed everyone who partook, Rhodes shows
this mysterious group of human and animal diseases spreading gradually
throughout the world, infecting and killing laboratory animals; patients
in surgery; herds of sheep, cattle, mink, deer and elk; children treated
with human growth hormone; and now, ominously, healthy young people in
Britain and on the Continent. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration
announcement in early 1997 of drastic measures to prevent an outbreak of
mad cow disease in the United States confirmed what Rhodes reveals and
explores in detail: that Americans who eat meat are almost certainly
already at risk.