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IN THE BLOOD by Charles Barber

IN THE BLOOD

How Two Outsiders Solved a Centuries-Old Medical Mystery and Took on the U.S. Army

by Charles Barber

Pub Date: May 30th, 2023
ISBN: 9781538709863
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing

The tale of an outcast engineer and a desperate marketer who came together to create a new medical technology.

In a book that blends biography, history, and medical science, Barber—a lecturer in psychiatry at Yale School of Medicine and author of Comfortably Numb and Citizen Outlaw—begins with an unlikely duo: Frank Hursey, an eccentric and uncharismatic inventor who uncovered the blood-clotting properties of the common mineral zeolite but sat on the discovery for years until he teamed up with salesman Bart Gullong. Together, they launched a new company, Z-Medica, in 2002 and introduced their zeolite blood-clotting product, QuikClot, to the U.S. Navy, to rousing success. Over the course of its venture, Z-Medica overcame obstacles from the outside—namely, those of antagonistic Dr. John Holcomb, the head of trauma medicine for the Army—and from within when Gullong struggled with his own personal traumas. It is a classic American success story—perhaps too classic even for the broad target audience. The author’s prose is readable by anyone, background in medical technologies or not, including explanations and common terms whenever technical phrasing arises. This fits well with the biographical content but contrasts with the explorations of the mechanics of various technologies. Specialist readers may be interested in these sections, though Barber doesn’t delve deeply enough and includes redundancies to keep general audiences up to speed. Just as abundant are extra biographical elements, namely character backgrounds for the minor players in Hursey and Gullong’s story. While often interesting in their own rights, these character-specific historical asides are presented formulaically and have little bearing on the primary narrative. The core story lacks sufficient development, requiring numerous digressions, some of them intriguing and at least tangentially related, to fill out the text.

An inspiring story about a novel medical invention, albeit one stretched thin as a single layer of gauze.