The hunt for the origin of the AIDS virus began over twenty years ago.
It was a journey that went around the world and involved painstaking
research to unravel how, when, and where the virus first infected
humans.
Dorothy H. Crawford traces the story back to the remote rain forests of
Africa - home to the primates that carry the ancestral virus - and
reveals how HIV-1 first jumped from chimpanzees to humans in rural south
east Cameroon. Examining how this happened, and how it then travelled
back to Colonial west central Africa where it eventually exploded as a
pandemic, she asks why and how it was able to spread so widely.
From hospital intensive care wards to research laboratories and the
African rain forests, this is the wide-ranging story of a killer virus
and a tale of scientific endeavour.