"The drama of Schwartz's book...is in the slow coming together of several historical strands of scientific research, given the momentum of a detective story by his personification of the book's malign protagonist: a rogue protein given to feints and counterattacks." - Irish Times; "[Schwartz] succeeds in formulating a history of research on TSEs that captivates the reader - science and storytelling at their best." - British Medical Journal (BMJ); "Maxime Schwartz develops the history of TSE as a mystery novel.... Schwartz poses questions, suggests possible answers, and then describes the scientific advances that produced the answers. The book...should appeal to a wide range of readers." - Nature; "Schwartz's fully engrossing, two-century-plus detective story provides a thoroughgoing history of the discovery of 'mad cow' and related diseases that also illuminates the ways in which science works. I could not put this book down." - Jon Beckwith, author of Making Genes, Making Waves; "Rarely have I read a book as scary, interesting, informative and enjoyable." - John E. Talbott, University of California, Santa Barbara"
"Rarely have I read a book as scary, interesting, informative and enjoyable."—John E. Talbott, University of California, Santa Barbara
Praise for the French edition:
"Maxime Schwartz's book . . . constitutes an ode to science, to its rigor, to its perseverance, but also, as we shall see, to its modesty. How the Cows Turned Mad is a gothic historical novel: its author, molecular biologist and former director of the Pasteur Institute, leads us along a thread that unravels over almost three centuries, from Louis XV to Tony Blair."—Le Figaro
"But above all, and this is indeed remarkable in a work which treats such a scientific subject, How the Cows Turned Mad is not a scientific treatise for scientists, but rather a book. And as such, it reads easily and pleasurably."—Le Généraliste
"How the Cows Turned Mad: that's the title of this book, almost a detective novel, just published by the molecular biologist Maxime Schwartz. An indispensable tool that allows us to sort through the truths and untruths and finally assess the situation."—Panorama du médecin