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Civil War soldiers faced many threats: bullets, cannon balls, bayonets, scurvy, dysentery, malaria, mumps, and measles. Yet, Robert E. Lee’s immortal Army of Northern Virginia lost 70,000 men to an invisible threat, one not understood until forty years after the guns fell silent. 
 
That menace was hookworm, which bled the Deep South dry, not just during the war but for generations before and after. Now for the first time, a book-length exploration of this menace clearly shows its effects not just in the American South but throughout the world. Full justice is done to the Hookworm Heroes who raised half the country from being enfeebled “poor white trash,” to the productive and healthy men and women of the South today. A biologist’s view of Pickett’s Charge casts a whole new light on both commanders and the men who faced the Union guns, opening a window of knowledge to both Civil War buffs and general readers. Twenty-four photographs. Fully indexed.

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Published April, 2016
Paperback, 150 pages
6 x 9 inches
isbn: 978-0692682449 
$12.99

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This hookworm, Ancyclostoma duodenale, has its mouth firmly clamped on the lining of a human intestine, and represents the estimated 2 billion hookworms that bled the Confederate soldiers, depriving their cells of oxygen and leaving them pale and far below their normal vigor. (Photo: Armed Forces Institute of Pathology.)

A massive public health campaign forty years after the war freed the South from this invisible plague and shone a retrospective light on a much neglected part of the Civil War.

Dr. Lowry received his medical degree from Stanford University in 1957, and is the author of the best-selling The Story the Soldiers Wouldn’t Tell.​
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