This brief traces the story of one of our most common medicines -
aspirin. On a journey involving science, diverse characters, shady
business deals, innovative advertising and good old-fashioned luck,
Rooney and Campbell describe how aspirin was developed and marketed on a
global scale. Starting at the beginning of the twentieth century, the
authors explain the use of aspirin during the First World War, the
development of competition drugs such as ibuprofen during the interwar
years, and the application of aspirin to heart disease in the 1950s and
1960s. On a broader level, Rooney and Campbell show that the development
of America's modern pharmaceuticals was a complex weaving of chemistry
and mass culture. They argue that aspirin's story provides a way to
understand the application of complex chemical formulas in medical
results. This brief is of interest to historians of chemistry and
medicine as well as the general educated reader.