Resurrecting dead scientists

The Poisoner's Handbook, is out next week and in a recent interview I found myself trying to explain why I'm now writing about poison and murder when my last book was about supernatural research and the one before that about the biology of love and affection.

I know, it sounds like I have a short attention span. Usually I explain that these topics are all connected by my fascination with the way science and society intersect, the way science changes our world, the way our culture responds. But this time  I found myself replying: " I'm a really good friend to dead scientists."

This could be another way of saying that I've been spending too much time with the 1920s forensic scientists of my book. But I meant it differently. I've never been that drawn to celebrity scientists. But I really like unsung heroes - or rather I like to sing about them a little: the controversial, alcoholic, poetry-writing, obsessive psychologist Harry Harlow,  the subject of my 2002 book  Love at Goon Park, as an earlier example. When I was researching Harlow at the Archives of the History of American Psychology, I stumbled across a good dozen other scientists,  wonderfully smart and innovative in their time, lost to public memtory.

And Harlow was far better known that the two forensic scientists at the heart of The Poisoner's Handbook.  The story of Charles Norris and Alexander Gettler was mostly lost in New York City's municipal archive, stored in boxes covered with black dust, in the documents saved by their families. And yet they literally helped invent forensics in the United States, they were the CSI scientists of the Jazz Age era.

I hope to make people remember how remarkable they were.  It was never in my career plan - not I've ever had much of a career plan - but I think I'm right in that interview response. I've turned out to be a good friend to dead scientists.

More like this

During the 1920's, poisons could be found in abundance in almost any New York apartment. Cyanide, arsenic, lead, carbon monoxide, radium, mercury, methyl alcohol and more; these materials were part of everyday life, especially bootlegged alcohol in the "dry" era when the only stiff drinks commonly…
If you picked up The Poisoner's Handbook (amazon.com) looking for a fool-proof recipe, I hope you have read the book through and realized at the end that such a thing does not exist: you'll get busted. If they could figure it all out back in 1930s, can you imagine how much easier they can figure…
This is going to be a quick welcome to Deborah Blum (@deborahblum) who has just moved her blog, Speakeasy Science, to ScienceBlogs. Why quick? Because I am only 22 pages away from finishing her latest book, The Poisoner's Handbook: Murder and the Birth of Forensic Medicine in Jazz Age New York.…
Been a while, so these cover a span of reading. I'm in the midst of my friend Adrienne Mayor's The Poison King: The Life and Legend of Mithradates, Rome's Deadliest Enemy, and can report that Mr. M is quite a poisonous but complicated handful -- a dark and deadly echo of his hero and model,…

as a retired chemist i found this book very enjoyable and quite easy to read. it is well written for the average person to understand.it was also nice to learn of the early history of forensics and toxicology. congrats on a fine book.

By craig munn (not verified) on 13 Mar 2010 #permalink

Here is another chemist that thought your book was a great read. Poison and forensic science is an intriguing subject. In in my work, I am involved in the analysis (in water and the environment) of many different compounds, amongst which cyanide and arsenic.
Well done! I look forward to your next book!

By Timoer Frelink (not verified) on 22 Apr 2010 #permalink

Thanks so much - for me, nothing like a good review from a chemist. Sounds like you do fascinating (and important) work.