"Powerful, rich with details, moving, humane, and full of important
lessons for an age when weapons of mass destruction are loose among us."
-- Richard Rhodes, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Making of the
Atomic Bomb
The Great Plague is one of the most compelling events in human
history--even more so now, when the notion of plague has never loomed
larger as a contemporary public concern.
The plague that devastated Asia and Europe in the 14th century has been
of never-ending interest to both scholarly and general readers. Many
books on the plague rely on statistics to tell the story: how many
people died; how farm output and trade declined. But statistics can't
convey what it was like to sit in Siena or Avignon and hear that a
thousand people a day are dying two towns away. Or to have to chose
between your own life and your duty to a mortally ill child or spouse.
Or to live in a society where the bonds of blood and sentiment and law
have lost all meaning, where anyone can murder or rape or plunder anyone
else without fear of consequence.
In The Great Mortality, author John Kelly lends an air of immediacy
and intimacy to his telling of the journey of the plague as it traveled
from the steppes of Russia, across Europe, and into England, killing 75
million people--one third of the known population--before it vanished.