









Buy The Sick Rose: Or; Disease and the Art of Medical Illustration 1 by Barnett, Richard (ISBN: 9780500517345) from desertcart's Book Store. Everyday low prices and free delivery on eligible orders. Review: A unique and fascinating gift for medical professionals - I bought this book as a present for a nurse. I came across it in a bookshop and thought it was the perfect fit. It’s a beautifully printed book with fascinating content, though definitely not for everyone. The historical medical illustrations of diseases are unusual, sometimes unsettling, but incredibly interesting. A very unique and thoughtful gift for someone in the medical field. Maybe not a coffee table book, it would scare your guests! Review: Brilliant! Worth every penny - Such an beautiful book, full of interesting facts and images. I found this book while browsing and I was hesitant to buy but I'm so glad I did. Please go buy this book you won't be disappointed. Beautiful condition, quick delivery very happy I did.

| Best Sellers Rank | 36,463 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) 56 in Medicine References 69 in Graphic Arts in Illustration 253 in Scientific History & Philosophy |
| Customer reviews | 4.9 4.9 out of 5 stars (750) |
| Dimensions | 17.7 x 24.3 x 3 cm |
| Edition | 1st |
| ISBN-10 | 0500517347 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0500517345 |
| Item weight | 1.05 kg |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 256 pages |
| Publication date | 2 Jun. 2014 |
| Publisher | Thames and Hudson Ltd |
G**L
A unique and fascinating gift for medical professionals
I bought this book as a present for a nurse. I came across it in a bookshop and thought it was the perfect fit. It’s a beautifully printed book with fascinating content, though definitely not for everyone. The historical medical illustrations of diseases are unusual, sometimes unsettling, but incredibly interesting. A very unique and thoughtful gift for someone in the medical field. Maybe not a coffee table book, it would scare your guests!
M**E
Brilliant! Worth every penny
Such an beautiful book, full of interesting facts and images. I found this book while browsing and I was hesitant to buy but I'm so glad I did. Please go buy this book you won't be disappointed. Beautiful condition, quick delivery very happy I did.
A**X
Definitely buy this if you’re on the fence
Absolutely love this book. The quality is impeccable. The page quality is amazing. Not flimsy at all. The overall finish of the book is absolutely beautiful. I love anything medically related so buying this book was a must. Very interesting read and the images compliment it beautifully
M**P
Excellent book
I bought this on a whim as I've got an interest in older medical illustration. I am thoroughly pleased with the book. The illustrations are all of really good quality and shows the progression of a large number of illnesses and conditions that with the advent of modern medicine are no longer seen in medical practice (well, at least I hope they're not). I personally think this is a fantastic coffee table book, my girlfriend on the other hand disagrees. Apparently, it may put some people off their biscuits.....
A**R
Fabulous book
Super quirky and beautifully presented
O**S
Satiates a morbid fascination of disease
Easy to read and understand. Fascinating facts on the Victorian take on various diseases such as Leprosy, Cancer and Cholera. The art is taken from scientific drawings and brings together some interesting and sometimes pretty gruesome diseases. I've been reading this from page to page and I've really enjoyed it.
M**S
Beautifully horrible illustrations - I got this for my daughter ...
Beautifully horrible illustrations - I got this for my daughter who'd just started work in a pathology lab, but had a look at it myself first. The only thing I didn't like was the use of very thick, very black lines as part of the design (luckily not on all pages) which overwhelmed the delicate and tenderly drawn illustrations.
A**A
Very interesting book
I bought this book based on the reviews on Amazon, and it is amazing; morbid and fascinating. I look forward to buying the other books in this series
E**E
This gorgeously designed little 7" x 10" book, 'little' being relative to typically oversized art monographs, is one of the most paradoxically appealing and revolting releases of the year. I have long admired D.A.P.'s commitment to utilizing the highest-quality materials and binding in every book they publish, and The Sick Rose is no exception. The writing is informative and impeccably researched, delving into the gruesome history of anatomical research in a professional manner that walks the tightrope between sensationalistic indulgence of morbid fascination on the one side, and overly clinical jargon designed to emotionally distance the reader on the other. The earliest years of what would become modern medicine were remarkable in the lengths these 'Resurrectionists' went to in obtaining corpses for study. For a time, condemned criminals were routinely sentenced to death and public dissection, their bodies donated to the Medical Institutes. This practice was ended in the early 19th Century, but parliament allowed that any person found dead without identification and/or someone willing to claim their body would be fair game for anatomical research. This amounted to depriving the poorest classes of any guarantee that they would be given a decent burial, and many were outraged that poverty alone meant they might be dissected publicly like criminals. 'Burial Insurance' became a popular method of avoiding the indignities that might have been inflicted on their bodies. As test subjects became scarce, members of the nascent medical community were complicit in murder, paying money to the 'Ghouls' that stalked the harbors for departing ships, where they would kill drunken sailors not likely to be missed and deliver them to the Anatomists. This Black Market trade in lives was rooted in an upper class arrogance that saw the poor as a drain on society. This arrogance also extended to their belief in the supreme importance of their research. A worthless beggar or drunk was far more valuable dead, perhaps providing them with the knowledge of how to end smallpox, syphilis, cancer, even death itself (Hence the term 'Resurrectionist'). As fascinating as the history of medicine is, the artwork, used to document and compare ailments in the age before cameras, is truly stunning; first, because the level of technical ability is of a very high order, and second, because many of the symptoms depicted are horrifying, disfiguring the subjects to a point that is near monstrous. The fact that the artists rarely depersonalize their subjects, but instead make us see and feel for their suffering, forcing us to wonder who these poor people were, makes The Sick Rose one of the most powerful and poignant artbooks I've read. Once again, I have to comment on the design and layout, which is some of the best work I've seen. The cover image, the turquoise cloth spine and paint-embossed titles, the color endpapers which turn a blown-up detail of a torso covered in lesions into a random design element -- everything offers proof of the thought, labor and expense that went into all 260 pages of this fine volume. Not for the squeamish, but that should be obvious. Highest Recommendations.
M**E
I bought this based on the great reviews ( as always, thanks fellow amazonies) and I am fascinated by this stuff. I have dozens and dozens of old, old medical books, medical anomaly books, forensic books but this one added a whole other level to it for me - the human faces, looking these horrifically ill people in the eyes, learning that the woman on the front cover caught and died of cholera in *4 hours* but also seeing her drawn, and then compared, when she was well. how beautiful she was. how fleeting every moment is. the pictures are remarkable and most look like photographs, they're so detailed and clear. its hard to look at. the text is filled with medical history- dissection was outlawed except on criminals and...orphans. the archaic,, often sadistic cures that were high medicine at the time. how medicine evolved, why, who. Heartbreaking, humanizing,, painstakingly thorough. This isnt a ghoul-factor book - its an education. my only complaint is the way the drawings are labeled. they usually have their titles and explanations several pages away, devoting entire pages to them or several on a page. they're then listed as "previous overleaf", "above right overleaf" etc. I found it irritating at times to have to flip back and forth to read what I was seeing and even then at times it was confusing to figure out what was what because there are a LOT of drawings. I would have liked the explanation on the page with the graphic. Extra cool are old Chinese watercolors of faces with pustules, every one being made by raising the paper itself. an incredible book that will show the horrors of illness, but you can't look away because it's incredible art.
M**R
Un libro con unas ilustraciones maravillosas. No sé por qué lo imaginaba pequeñito y la verdad es que es bastante grande, con unos acabados de buena calidad y estética retro en consonancia con su contenido. Muy contenta con la compra, de hecho ya me he agenciado los otros libros restantes de la serie.
L**H
A really wonderful book. Beautifully illustrated and full of fascinating historical information.
L**A
Sehr hochwertig, tolle Bilder
Trustpilot
2 months ago
1 month ago