The Emperor of All Maladies
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Winner of the Guardian First Book Award 2011Winner of the Pulitzer
Prize for Non-fiction 2011Shortlisted for the Duff Cooper Prize
2011Shortlisted for the Wellcome Trust Book PrizeIn The Emperor of
All Maladies, Siddhartha Mukherjee, doctor, researcher and
award-winning science writer, examines cancer with a cellular
biologist’s precision, a historian’s perspective, and a
biographer’s passion. The result is an astonishingly lucid and
eloquent chronicle of a disease humans have lived with – and
perished from – for more than five thousand years.The story of
cancer is a story of human ingenuity, resilience and perseverance,
but also of hubris, arrogance and misperception, all leveraged
against a disease that, just three decades ago, was thought to be
easily vanquished in an all-out ‘war against cancer’. Mukherjee
recounts centuries of discoveries, setbacks, victories and deaths,
told through the eyes of predecessors and peers, training their
wits against an infinitely resourceful adversary.From the Persian
Queen Atossa, whose Greek slave cut off her malignant breast, to
the nineteeth-century recipient of primitive radiation and
chemotherapy and Mukherjee’s own leukemia patient, Carla, The
Emperor of All Maladies is about the people who have soldiered
through toxic, bruising, and draining regimes to survive and to
increase the store of human knowledge.Riveting and magesterial, The
Emperor of All Maladies provides a fascinating glimpse into the
future of cancer treatments and a brilliant new perspective on the
way doctors, scientists, philosophers and lay people have observed
and understood the human body for millennia.