Thomas Morris is a writer and medical historian. His first book, The Matter of the Heart, a history of heart surgery, was a winner of a Royal Society of Literature Jerwood Award. He lives in London.
Praise for The Mystery of the Exploding Teeth
"A Ripley-esque collection of 'compellingly disgusting, hilarious,
or downright bizarre' medical oddities... accompanied by the
author's witty and often humorous, colloquial commentary."
--Kirkus Reviews
"In The Mystery of the Exploding Teeth and Other
Curiosities From the History of Medicine, Thomas Morris takes a
delightful romp through a myriad of entertaining, arcane and
obscure medical anecdotes plucked from 18th- and 19th-century
newspapers, journals and textbooks... Using a panoply of colorful
examples, the author artfully illustrates the frustrations,
uncertainty, poorly founded confidence and frequent futility of
medical practice in the prescientific age."
--Wall Street Journal
"The vast amount of material from diverse sources will amuse
readers and leave them shaking their heads... [an] informative,
fascinating look at the history of medicine."
--Library Journal
"A wonderfully gruesome tour of inexplicable illnesses,
questionable remedies, jaw-dropping operations and recoveries that
defy logic... a fascinating window into the world of medical
oddities... This tour of strange and unbelievable medical cases
from history is funny and terrifying in equal measure."
--Shelf Awareness
"Delightfully horrifying...Do yourself a favor and preorder
it so that you can gross everyone out at Thanksgiving."
--Popular Science
"A particularly fascinating reminder of medical advancement...
Morris has combed through old medical journals and compiled a trove
of the most bizarre, disgusting - and compelling - cases from the
early 17th to the turn of the 20th century. It's like medical
rubbernecking."
--New York Post
"The clinical cases Morris has collected, creating what amounts to
a medical version of Ripley's Believe It or Not!, are often
intriguing, occasionally disgusting, sometimes tragic, but always
weird... Morris offers a most peculiar jaunt through medical
history."
--Booklist
"A gruesome but weirdly compelling trip through several centuries
of quack cures, horrific operations, and bizarre accidents."
--New York Daily News
"Morris pokes fun in a respectful manner that isn't
mean-spirited... Even better, these accounts go beyond the usual
leeches-and-mercury tales; instead, most of what Morris presents
hasn't had a good exam in decades. Despite their age - and many are
200-plus years old - these articles seem fresh... if boredom is
what ails you, The Mystery of the Exploding Teeth is an
excellent remedy."
--Terri Schlichenmeyer, The Bookworm Sez
"[A] series of case studies from our research past that will remind
you that we are never as smart as we think. Morris uses images of
old documents, and citations from physicians of the past, in way
that makes the book both real, grounded-and a lot of fun."
--Science Friday, Best Science Books of 2018
"Replete with tales such as "the human pincushion" and "suffocated
by a fish," The Mystery of the Exploding Teeth is a
bewildering walk through medical history that will astonish
readers. This book proves that truth is indeed stranger-and more
stomach-churning-than fiction. Between the toasting forks
projectiles and deadly dentures, there are lessons a-plenty on how
not to die."
--Lydia Kang, MD, author of Quackery
"This delightfully bizarre compendium of medical mishaps will
certainly tickle you-what's not to love about exploding teeth?-but
something deeper is at work. Morris offers a wryly generous view of
the fallibilities of the body and psyche (read: the sailor who
wouldn't stop swallowing knives) and doctors' inventive, often
heroic attempts to remedy same, as medical science developed. At
heart, this is an exploration of our humanity, in all its absurdity
and valor."
--Dawn Raffel, author of The Strange Case of Dr.
Couney
"The Mystery of the Exploding Teeth is such a weirdly
wonderful tour through the history of medicine - from wandering
bullets to apparently evil cucumbers - that on one level it's just
pure fun to read. But Thomas Morris' intelligent story telling also
makes it a fascinating look at medical history with all its
mistakes, superstitions, and eventual understanding of the ever
mysterious human body."
--Deborah Blum, author of The Poison Squad
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