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Gina Kolata

Personal Information

Born February 25, 1948 (78 years old)
Also known as: Gina Bari Kolata
11 books
3.3 (3)
53 readers

Description

Gina Bari Kolata is an American science journalist and author.

Books

Newest First

Flu

3.0 (1)
37

The fascinating, true story of the world's deadliest disease. In 1918, the Great Flu Epidemic felled the young and healthy virtually overnight. An estimated forty million people died as the epidemic raged. Children were left orphaned and families were devastated. As many American soldiers were killed by the 1918 flu as were killed in battle during World War I. And no area of the globe was safe. Eskimos living in remote outposts in the frozen tundra were sickened and killed by the flu in such numbers that entire villages were wiped out. Scientists have recently rediscovered shards of the flu virus frozen in Alaska and preserved in scraps of tissue in a government warehouse. The author unravels the mystery of this lethal virus with the high drama of a great adventure story. Delving into the history of the flu and previous epidemics, detailing the science and the latest understanding of this mortal disease, she addresses the prospects for a great epidemic recurring, and, most important, what can be done to prevent it.

Clone

4.0 (1)
3

"Award-winning scientific journalist Gina Kolata ... reveals the story behind Dolly--reaching back to our earliest attempts to clone, uncovering the startling, largely unreported events that led to Dolly's birth, and exploring the mind-boggling questions that Dolly presents for our future." - book jacket

The New York Times book of medicine

0.0 (0)
0

Features 120 articles on medicine selected from The New York Times' archives.

Experiencing Reading

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2

Incident —Countee Cullen 5 Excerpt from The History of Art —H. W. Janson 11 Don't let that horse/eat that violin —Lawrence Ferlinghetti 11 The Upturned Face —Stephen Crane 14 How to Defuse the Population Bomb—Robert S. McNamara zz Population: The Uninvited Guest—Eugene Linden 30 Excerpt from My Lord, What a Morning —Marian Anderson 34 Parent and Child: What's behind spiked hair and pierced ears—Lawrence Kutner 37 Language and the Lunatic Fringe —Doris Lessing 40 Excerpt from Mr. Godolphin—Martha Sullivan Research in Brief: Flight of the Bumblebee —Mary Jones 48 How a New England Legend Came to Be —Alan Ferguson 50 Maintaining the Organic Lawn 51 Village of Snake Charmers Sees Hard Times —Barbara Crossette 52 Assault Weapons Aren't 'the Problem —Gary Kleck 54 Our Two-Sided Brain —John Chaffee 65 Stars —Sara Teasdale 80 Excerpt from Tarzan of the Apes—Edgar Rice Burroughs 91 The Waning Moon—Percy Bysshe Shelley 103 Hagar the Horrible—Dik Browne 103 The First Tastes of Vintage '93—Bryan Miller 104 '80s-Babble: Untidy Treasure —Stefan Kanfer 105 Dermatitis —Samuel M. Bluefarb, M.D. 117 A Brief History of Exercise—Victoria Roberts 143 [The Story of an Hour]( —Kate Chopin 177 I'm Your Horse in the Night—Luisa Valenzuela 183 Appointment in Samarra—W. Somerset Maugham 191 Excerpt from Elmira—Richard Brautigan 197 Excerpt from [Fahrenheit 451]( Bradbury 203 Chains 1942—Fanny Tillman Trueherz and Sandra Brown 209 Jack Luggage —William McGreevy 221 Girls of Summer —Marie Brenner 229 Death in the Orchard—Edward Brown 235 Excerpt from "No Name Woman" in The Woman Warrior—Maxine Hong Kingston 241 A Rough Ride—John Marchese 247 Marian Anderson Is Dead at 96; Singer Shattered Racial Barriers —Allan Kozinn 257 300 People of Letters Come To Pulitzer's Birthday Party—James Barron 265 How to Assay an Essay —Carmen Collins 283 Hand, Eye, Brain: Some "Basics" in the Writing Process—Janet Emig 289 Seeing and Imagining: Clues to the Workings Of the Mind's Eye—Sandra Blakeslee 295 Linguists Debate Study Classifying Language As Innate Human Skill —Gina Kolata 305 The Many Lives and Tricks of 9 —Pico Iyer 313 Cross Out a Landmark on the Chinatown Tour—Michael T. Kaufman 319 Dollie And Johnnie—William Safire 325 Into the Sunshine and Another Spring—John A. Gould 331 Language of Early Americans is Deciphered —John Noble Wilford 337 In Praise of the Humble Comma—Pico lyer 345 The 30•Second Spot Quiz —Hugh Rank 362 The Communication Collapse—Norman Cousins 371 Appearances Are Destructive—Mark Mathabane 377 Voters Assailed by Unfair Persuasion—Daniel Goleman 383 When Movies Ruled Our Lives—Theodore Roszak 399 Hue and Cry—Barbara Flanagan 407

The baby doctors

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Periantology is "a new field of medicine--treating the fetus while it is still in the womb." Covers fetal surgery, detecting abnormalities, etc.