The I Index

Spare Parts: The Story of Medicine Through the History of Transplant Surgery

Bottom of the pile

24

/100

I Index Overall Rating

Readers

33/100

Critics

16/100

Scholars

N/A

Author:

Paul Craddock

Publisher:

St. Martin's Press

Date:

May 10, 2022

Cultural historian Paul Craddock takes us on a journey - from sixteenth-century skin grafting to contemporary stem cell transplants - uncovering stories of experiments and operations performed by unexpected people in unexpected places.

What The Reviewers Say

Thomas Morris,
The Times Literary Supplement (UK)
Craddock’s explanation of how this knowledge made its way from a coastal village in Calabria to the great university cities of Europe encompasses ancient agriculture, the Galenic doctrine of the four bodily humours, and an illuminating digression about Renaissance gardens. The chapters on blood transfusion and tooth transplantation achieve an equally happy synthesis of intellectual and medical history, drawing on Cartesian philosophy, Vitalism and the remarkable inventions of Jacques de Vaucanson, who constructed automata that included a realistic defecating duck.
Christopher Hart,
The Sunday Times (UK)
This parade of death and disease, human ingenuity mingled with so much callousness, and a succession of eminent medics motivated more by the thrill of acclaim than Hippocratic duty or the milk of human kindness, can make for queasy reading, but the author, a research associate at UCL and the Science Museum, strives to keep it compelling...Occasional gleams of spontaneous humanity certainly come as a relief..
Kate Womersley,
The Spectator (UK)
The charm and value of Spare Parts comes from situating these landmarks in a wider history of ideas.
Robert Sullivan,
The New York Times Book Review
... a thrilling and often terrifying ride through transplantation and the theories and techniques that made it possible..