Scholastic Year in Sports 2017.
Scholastic. $9.99.
Best & Buzz Worthy 2017:
World Records, Trending Topics, and Viral Moments. By Cynthia O’Brien,
Michael Bright and Donald Sommerville. Scholastic. $12.99.
Bleed, Blister, Puke, and Purge:
The Dirty Secrets Behind Early American Medicine. By J. Marin Younker. Zest
Books. $13.99.
It can be fun, instructive
or both to take a look ahead by taking a look backwards, and in a sense that is
what both these books do, albeit in very different ways. The latest Scholastic Year in Sports volume, like
those of earlier years, includes material only through August – in this case
August 2016 – because of the time needed to assemble the book. So it is a
“2017” edition only in the sense that sports enthusiasts may want to know who
did what in the first eight months of 2016 in order to watch for what those
same players or teams may do in the coming year. There is, for instance, no way
to include the 2016 Top 10 college football teams here – the timing does not
work – so the 2015 Top 10 are included instead. And the list of the final
Associated Press rankings will be of more interest for its earlier entries – it
goes back to 1936, the poll’s first year – than its most-recent ones, since it
runs only through 2015. The various records set during 2016, early enough in
the year to appear here, are of greater interest (and presumably have more
staying power) than lists and rankings. For example, there was a triple play –
the first ever recorded in baseball in the 115 years records of this type have
been kept – made by the Chicago White Sox against the Texas Rangers. In
basketball, there was a single-season record for three-point baskets – 402 of
them – set by Stephen Curry. In hockey, Patrick Kane scored a point in 26
consecutive games, the longest streak since 1992, and superstar Gordie Howe
died in June 2016 at age 88. In NASCAR racing, 2016 was the first year of
digital dashboard displays in all cars – certainly the sort of thing whose
effects fans will want to watch for in 2017. In figure skating, American
skaters had their best showing in a decade – they won two of the four top
places at the 2016 World Championships and will certainly bear watching again
in 2017. Scholastic Year in Sports
2017, like its predecessor annual volumes, is packed with photos and
statistics, contains minimal supportive text, and is – obviously – only for
dyed-in-the-wool sports fans, since it covers a large number of sports in
once-over-lightly fashion. As a book to provide an overview of a fan’s favorite
sport or sports through August 2016, and perhaps get him or her interested in
something new for 2017 because that sport looks particularly interesting as
presented here, this volume certainly has its place.
Sports are among the topics
in another highly visual, once-over-lightly book that clearly is strongly
influenced by the Internet and that casts a wider informational net to see what
it can catch. This is Best & Buzz
Worthy 2017, which in addition to a sports section has ones called “Music
Makers,” “Screen and Stage,” “On the Move,” “Super Structures,” “High Tech,”
“Amazing Animals,” “Incredible Earth,” and “State Stats.” This is nothing more
or less than a “greatest hits of the moment” survey, with some entries certain
to hold their place only temporarily (longest music video, highest-paid TV
actresses, top-grossing movies) and others equally certain to hold them in
perpetuity (world’s most dangerous mushroom, deepest cave on Earth, largest hot
desert). The direct Internet tie-ins here come at the start of each chapter,
which note items that are “trending.” In “Super Structures,” for example, this
includes Denmark’s production of 42% of its electricity from wind turbines and
the Eiffel Tower being the building most likely to be seen on Instagram in
2015. In “On the Move,” there is the note that the race car driver with the
most Twitter followers is (or was, at the time the book was assembled) Danica
Patrick. In “Amazing Animals,” there is a remark that a video of a rat dragging
a slice of pizza down a subway staircase in New York City had two million views
in 24 hours. The whole book is a fount of trivia and miscellany. There is a
graphic showing the largest stadiums in the United States, another showing the
world’s smallest owls, and a table listing the 10 most-popular dog breeds in
the country. There is a note that Arizona is the state with the largest
collection of telescopes, and one that North Dakota has the tallest scrap-metal
sculpture. There is a picture of RoboBee, the world’s smallest robot (smaller
than a paperclip), and one of the person with the most Facebook “likes” (soccer
star Cristiano Ronaldo, not to be confused with the product with the most Facebook “likes,” which is Coca-Cola). The point
of all this is that being “buzz-worthy,” or even “best” (however that may be
defined), is not the same as being “important.” As long as readers keep that in
mind, they will find Best & Buzz
Worthy 2017 to be a pleasantly skimmable volume that makes no claim to
in-depth coverage of anything – and really does not need to provide any.
Also skimmable, but scarcely
pleasantly so, is a book that goes farther back into history and delves into
some areas less salutary than sports, movies and celebrities – but far more
significant. J. Marin Younker’s Bleed,
Blister, Puke, and Purge is overstated and overdone – the “dirty secrets”
subtitle is really not necessary – but is nevertheless a fascinating foray into
American medicine in the days before antibiotics, anesthetics, or even an
understanding of the existence of germs and their role in disease. There was
nothing particularly American about this ignorance; it was worldwide. But
Younker in general selects specifically American cases to illustrate it. Some
are quite well known, such as the medical treatment of George Washington in his
final illness: when dried beetles applied to his neck did not draw out the
throat infection that was tormenting him, doctors had him bled, as was
customary at the time, resulting in an 80% blood drainage that was fatal.
Others cases are almost equally notorious, such as the treatment of a later
president, James Garfield: his three-inch bullet wound expanded to 20 inches
because physicians were constantly poking their dirty fingers and unsterile
instruments into it in a vain search for the bullet that a frustrated would-be
politician named Charles Guiteau had shot into Garfield’s back. On the other
hand, many of the stories here are less familiar, such as Reverend Theophilus
Packard’s commitment of his wife to an insane asylum because of her “dangerous”
religious views (she disagreed with him); his later imprisonment of her in
their own home after the asylum released her; and her eventual successful court
case against him, which led her to found the Anti-Insane Asylum Society and
become an advocate for women’s rights. There is a great deal of fascinating
information in this book, delivered, however, in rather scattershot fashion,
and sometimes written confusingly: “There is a well-known urban legend about [18th-century
surgeon] John Hunter auto-experimenting, i.e., trying out medical procedures on
himself, which might or might not be an urban legend.” The book is at its best
when showing how societal attitudes and lack of medical knowledge often
combined to make matters worse for patients – for example, in 1788, “angry
rioters in New York City tried to murder doctors who were known to be teaching
human dissection,” and a similar riot in 1824 led to an attack on Yale
University’s medical school, all because people believed it was wrong to study
dead human bodies to gain information for use in medical treatment. In passing,
Younkers makes reference to the theories, both insightful and wrong-headed, of the
ancient Greek physician Hippocrates, as well as those of the later Roman
physician Galen. Younkers talks about why bloodletting was done, and how – by
cutting, leeches, or cupping. He explains most of his book’s subtitle by noting
that “to ‘bleed, blister, and purge’ was deemed heroic therapy because of ‘the
strength of its combined actions.’” And he notes that “heroic therapy” remained
in use “because physicians didn’t have a solid understanding of diseases and
their causes.” All true, but Younkers sensationalizes needlessly – noting, for
example, that doctors sometimes bled patients 16 ounces a day for up to 14
days, while today blood donors are limited to those 16 ounces per session,
“with a mandatory waiting period of two
months between sessions.” So all he is really saying is that science has
advanced and medicine is practiced now in a better, more-scientific way. This
is inarguable, but scarcely very surprising. There is much of interest in
Younkers’ book, but the obviousness with which it is communicated, and the
rather unseemly notion that doctors prior to the modern era were somehow
deficient because they did the best they could with the knowledge of their
time, make Bleed, Blister, Puke, and
Purge a less-valuable guide to now-obsolete medical practices than it could
have been.
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