The Ghost Map.

Paperback, 297 pages

Published Sept. 17, 2006 by Riverhead.

ISBN:
978-0-7394-8384-8
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3 stars (1 review)

2 editions

Review of 'The Ghost Map' on 'Storygraph'

3 stars

This book delves—in a pop-scientific way—into the 1850s cholera outbreak in London, England. This was at a time when cholera wasn't in the medical books and thoughts about miasma were flounced about by so-called medical professionals.

Johnson is very good at providing ample background information to whatever happens during this book, for example, the following two paragraphs:

Water closets were a tremendous breakthrough as far as quality of life was concerned, but they had a disastrous effect on the city’s sewage problem. Without a functioning sewer system to connect to, most WCs simply flushed their contents into existing cesspools, greatly increasing their tendency to overflow. According to one estimate, the average London household used 160 gallons of water a day in 1850. By 1856, thanks to the runaway success of the water closet, they were using 244 gallons.



But the single most important factor driving London’s waste-removal crisis was a …