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Bitten

The Secret History of Lyme Disease and Biological Weapons

Audiobook (Includes supplementary content)
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A riveting thriller reminiscent of The Hot Zone, this true story dives into the mystery surrounding one of the most controversial and misdiagnosed conditions of our time—Lyme disease—and of Willy Burgdorfer, the man who discovered the microbe behind it, revealing his secret role in developing bug-borne biological weapons, and raising terrifying questions about the genesis of the epidemic of tick-borne diseases affecting millions of Americans today.
While on vacation on Martha's Vineyard, Kris Newby was bitten by an unseen tick. That one bite changed her life forever, pulling her into the abyss of a devastating illness that took ten doctors to diagnose and years to recover: Newby had become one of the 300,000 Americans who are afflicted with Lyme disease each year.

As a science writer, she was driven to understand why this disease is so misunderstood, and its patients so mistreated. This quest led her to Willy Burgdorfer, the Lyme microbe's discoverer, who revealed that he had developed bug-borne bioweapons during the Cold War, and believed that the Lyme epidemic was started by a military experiment gone wrong.

In a superb, meticulous work of narrative journalism, Bitten takes readers on a journey to investigate these claims, from biological weapons facilities to interviews with biosecurity experts and microbiologists doing cutting-edge research, all the while uncovering darker truths about Willy. It also leads her to uncomfortable questions about why Lyme can be so difficult to both diagnose and treat, and why the government is so reluctant to classify chronic Lyme as a disease.

A gripping, infectious page-turner, Bitten will shed a terrifying new light on an epidemic that is exacting an incalculable toll on us, upending much of what we believe we know about it.

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    • Booklist

      May 15, 2019
      Some 400,000 Americans a year contract Lyme disease from ticks. Could a biological-weapons release of the blood-sucking, disease-carrying parasites be responsible for rashes, swollen joints, fevers, headaches, and neurological problems? Maybe, says science writer Newby, a Lyme survivor who produced the documentary Under Our Skin (2008). She interviews many scientists, including the microbe's discoverer, Swiss American tick expert Willy Burgdorfer, and notes that the outbreak began in the late 1960s, when the military was conducting open-air tests of aerosolized bacteria and aggressive lone star ticks. Whether this theory proves to be true remains a mystery, but it's a fact that ticks have wreaked havoc for tens of millions of years. (They sucked dinosaur blood.) And it's true that reported cases of the disease have quadrupled in the United States since the 1990s. Newby ends with a call for the government to better fund and analyze the expansion of tick-borne diseases, incorporating the possibility that they were spread in an unnatural way. It's a creepy, skin-crawling theory that seems to belong in a Stephen King novel. Stay tuned.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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