‘This is a remarkable and fascinating story of scientific discovery, breakthrough medicine and inspirational female leadership by Catherine the Great. The revelations in this book resonate with today’s battle against Covid-19. Lucy Ward has undertaken brilliant detective work... This is a must-read book.’
‘This is a fascinating and meticulously researched book with the excitement of a thriller. It’s a remarkable story of female leadership and personal courage. Lucy Ward uses her brilliance as a narrator combined with her insight as a former Lobby journalist to bring to life one of history’s most powerful women who really did “follow the science”.’
‘Offers unforced parallels with our present ... At the heart of this learned, erudite book, full of rich and legible scientific detail, is the extraordinary, and extraordinarily moving, dynamic between the Empress and Dimsdale ... [a] rather thrilling account.’
‘It’s hard to imagine a better-timed book than this one'
‘This gripping account of her deep friendship with an English doctor – and their battle to save the Russian people from the scourge of smallpox – shows [Catherine the Great] in an entirely different light.’
‘In this fluent and enlightening account of the fight to eradicate the terrifying scourge of smallpox, Ward deftly describes how an English Quaker doctor, Thomas Dimsdale, played a crucial role as a pioneer of the new technique of inoculation... The Empress and the English Doctor is a gripping read and all the more timely and extraordinary for having been written in the midst of the Covid pandemic.’
‘This is a wonderful book. It tells the story of the greatest medical discovery before Pasteur, inoculation against smallpox, through the life of a Quaker doctor, Thomas Dimsdale, and his journey to Russia to treat Catherine the Great... It’s a long time since I’ve read a history book as beautifully constructed as this – it’s a remarkable achievement.’
'Ward ably contextualises the event within the intellectual currents of the era... Astute.'
‘A fascinating, deep dive into a neglected topic in the history of vaccines, with many lessons for the prevention of viruses today. Lucy Ward blends history and personality to shed light on a story that has been overlooked in favour of Jenner and his milkmaid.’
‘A combination of arcane detail and the high colour of a period drama.’
‘[A] sparkling history book with a fairytale atmosphere of sleigh rides, royal palaces and heroic risk-taking... This is exactly the book we need to read at the moment.’
‘Informative, enthusiastically written and based on thorough research.’
‘An enthralling tale of two remarkable personalities who risked all for the benefit of mankind, and of a struggle between medical science and human instinct that could not be more relevant today.’
‘Packed with political intrigue and scientific insight, this is a fascinating narrative revealing how early inoculation pioneers overcame superstition, prejudice and misinformation. Move forward more than two centuries and the parallels with the current Covid-19 pandemic are incredible!’
‘Timely and engaging... A truly fascinating book that reads like a thriller.’
‘Entertaining and well-researched.’
‘A tale of multiple and intertwining themes – private and public health, public administration, and the politics of Empires... Although the book is about things that happened over 250 years ago, the hopes and fears of the people facing those difficult choices resonate with our own times.’
‘Mirroring so many of the vaccination issues of our modern age, as well as those of bodily autonomy, feminism, and power...a must-read.’
‘Lucy Ward has zoomed in on one of the more dramatic episodes in that dramatic century... vivid.’
04/25/2022
Journalist Ward debuts with an entertaining account of how a British physician assisted Catherine the Great in an inspired plan to reduce smallpox in Russia while simultaneously strengthening her political power. In 1768, Thomas Dimsdale, a Quaker doctor from Hertford who recently had published a “landmark treatise” on smallpox inoculation, traveled to Russia to inoculate Catherine the Great and her son. A forerunner to vaccination, inoculation, which involved deliberately infecting healthy patients with a controlled dose of the virus, remained controversial and frightening to many Europeans. Though Dimsdale had a “flawless record,” the risks were enormous—if Catherine died, the Russian empire might crumble and the cause of science would be set back decades. Drawing on a rich array of primary sources, Ward details how Dimsdale’s “close patient observation but light-touch intervention” enabled him to build trust with the empress in the months before the procedure. Elsewhere, Ward evokes the terror wrought by smallpox outbreaks and recounts Catherine’s savvy public relations campaign to promote the procedure, which included holding an elaborate Orthodox Church ceremony to give thanks for her successful inoculation and insisting that her infected material be used to inoculate others. Brimming with vivid historical details, this is a memorable account of a medical and social breakthrough. (June)
‘A deft and captivating chronicle.’
‘Women’s role in driving forward key scientific discoveries has too often gone unrecognised. The Empress and the English Doctor honours Catherine the Great’s pioneering scientific journey, demonstrating her personal bravery, her exacting insight and her resolve to protect others against smallpox. This thrilling and important story offers an insight into the determination, tenacity and grit needed to work in science, even today!’
‘By 1980, the global smallpox vaccination campaign had resulted in the complete eradication of the deadly disease. Ward’s captivating and informative book relates events that took place two centuries earlier and laid the foundation of this unique achievement.’
‘Lucy Ward has zoomed in on one of the more dramatic episodes in that dramatic century... vivid.’
‘An extraordinary and fascinating story’
‘Lively and informative.’
‘A fascinating and beautifully told story about courageous vaccination pioneers.’
‘Timely... The author demonstrates beautifully how London has historically led on the science with first “inoculation” and then “vaccination” – indeed, longer than most people realise.’
Professor Dame Sally Davies
‘A rich and wonderfully urgent work of history which engagingly recounts one of the greatest moments in modern science and public health: a story of Enlightenment conviction, Court intrigue, Anglo-Russian relations, and timeless, personal bravery. An expertly recounted eighteenth-century tale of political leadership and medical progress with obvious insights for today.’
‘So meticulously researched, well-paced and finely written is this tale of medical drama and royal daring that one quickly forgets that it is Lucy Ward’s first book. Her story is a remarkable one, full of contemporary resonance, but fascinating in its own right... a real page-turner.’
‘A poignant tale, expertly researched and beautifully written.’
'[a] gripping story of Enlightenment ideals, female leadership, and the fight to promote science over superstition.'
‘Lucy Ward provides a racy but detailed account of these initiatives... Ward’s book is informative, enthusiastically written and based on thorough research.’
‘This is a fascinating and meticulously researched book with the excitement of a thriller. It’s a remarkable story of female leadership and personal courage. Lucy Ward uses her brilliance as a narrator combined with her insight as a former Lobby journalist to bring to life one of history’s most powerful women who really did “follow the science”.’
Malk Williams’s amiable manner immediately engages the listener with this history of smallpox inoculation and its adoption in Russia through a collaboration between Catherine the Great and an English physician. Williams’s pleasant voice and likable British accent, his fine pacing and attention to sense and detail, make the audiobook clear and easy to listen to. At times, his tone and projection seem more those of an announcer than someone recounting a story, but that becomes an issue only as the text itself loses one’s interest through its tiresome repetitions. The history is mostly interesting, and Williams mostly enjoyable, but by the end, the content tries the listener’s patience, and even the likable Williams loses some of his appeal. W.M. © AudioFile 2022, Portland, Maine