Rebecca's Reviews > The Butchering Art: Joseph Lister's Quest to Transform the Grisly World of Victorian Medicine

The Butchering Art by Lindsey Fitzharris
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(3.5) Surgery was a gory business with a notably high fatality rate well into the nineteenth century. Surgeons had the fastest hands in the West, but their victims were still guaranteed at least a few minutes of utter agony as they had a limb amputated or a tumor removed, and the danger wasn’t over after they were sewn up either: most patients soon died from hospital infections. The development of anesthetics and antiseptic techniques helped to change all that.

Fitzharris opens with the vivid and rather gruesome scene of a mid-thigh amputation performed by Robert Liston at University College Hospital in London in 1846. This surgery was different, though: it only took 28 seconds, but the patient felt nothing thanks to the ether he had been administered. He woke up a few minutes later asking when the procedure would begin. In the audience that day was Joseph Lister, who would become one of Britain’s most admired surgeons.

Lister came from a Quaker family and, after being educated at University College London, started his career in Edinburgh. Different to many medical professionals of the time, he was fascinated by microscopy and determined to find out what caused deadly infections. Carbolic acid and catgut ligatures were two of Lister’s main innovations that helped to fight infection. In fact, whether we realize it or not, his legacy is forever associated with antiseptics: Listerine mouthwash (invented in 1879) is named after him, and the Johnson brothers of Johnson & Johnson fame started their business mass-producing sterile surgical dressings after attending one of Lister’s lectures.

My interest tailed off a bit after the first third, as the book starts going into more depth about Lister’s work and personal life: he married his boss’s daughter and moved from Edinburgh to Glasgow and then back to London. However, the best is yet to come: the accounts of the surgeries he performed on his sister (a mastectomy that bought her three more years of life) and Queen Victoria (removing an orange-sized abscess from under her arm) are terrific. The chapter on treating the queen in secret at Balmoral Castle in 1871 was my overall favorite.

I was that kid who loved going to Civil War battlefields and medical museums and looking at all the different surgical saws and bullet fragments in museum cases, so I reveled in the gory details here but was not as interested in the biographical material. Do be sure you have a strong stomach before you try reading the prologue over a meal. This is a comparable read to The Remedy, about the search for a cure to tuberculosis.

Originally published on my blog, Bookish Beck.
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Reading Progress

March 6, 2018 – Started Reading
March 6, 2018 – Shelved
March 6, 2018 – Shelved as: biographical
March 6, 2018 – Shelved as: history
March 6, 2018 – Shelved as: medical
March 6, 2018 – Shelved as: read-via-netgalley
March 6, 2018 – Shelved as: reviewed-for-blog
March 6, 2018 – Shelved as: science-tech
March 12, 2018 – Finished Reading
March 20, 2018 – Shelved as: wellcome-prize-shortlist

Comments Showing 1-4 of 4 (4 new)

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message 1: by CanadianReader (new)

CanadianReader Great review!


Rebecca Canadian wrote: "Great review!"

Thank you! It was a worthwhile read.


message 3: by Janet M (last edited Mar 22, 2018 10:20AM) (new) - rated it 3 stars

Janet M Very helpful review, thanks! Have added it to my TBRs. I too loved that kind of stuff as a kid; my parents about had to drag me out of the Smithsonian Medical museum every time we went, lol!


Rebecca Janet wrote: "Very helpful review, thanks! Have added it to my TBRs. I too loved that kind of stuff as a kid; my parents about had to drag me out of the Smithsonian Medical museum every time we went, lol!"

Thanks, Janet. Maybe I should have become a doctor, or a researcher!


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