I have finished reading this relatively short book (a little over 200 pages) and I found it to be accessible for somebody not familiar with the field of study.
What is this book about, other than what the title obviously alludes at?
Well, in the words of the author, who summarizes it quit well in the preface:
Mike Bailie does a really great job of concisely building up the evidence for the influence of a cosmic hand in the black death by covering:
- dendrochronology (tree ring studies)
- radiocarbon
- ice core records
- myth
- historically documented fireballs, earthquakes, tsunamis
- plague
- comet frequencies
At the end of the book he wraps it up nicely and comes full circle by saying:
After reading this book a lot more events in our history are starting to make sense and have made me more of a realist as far as the workings of the universe, the (relatively) fragile nature of humanity and the role comets and meteors seem to play as cosmic agents of change showing up periodically to 'stir things up'.
Indeed, change is coming to America (and the rest of the world).
I want to conclude by quoting the author in his introduction since the below has become true for me as well:
What is this book about, other than what the title obviously alludes at?
Well, in the words of the author, who summarizes it quit well in the preface:
... instead as a dendrochronologist and a paleoecologist...I try to see what story can be conjured from the wide-ranging scientific evidence relating to any given period; in this case the fourteenth century. So this book is an attempt to pull together a picture of the environmental happenings across the fourteenth century that can act as a backdrop for the plague, whatever it was, that arrived into Europe in 1348.
Mike Bailie does a really great job of concisely building up the evidence for the influence of a cosmic hand in the black death by covering:
- dendrochronology (tree ring studies)
- radiocarbon
- ice core records
- myth
- historically documented fireballs, earthquakes, tsunamis
- plague
- comet frequencies
At the end of the book he wraps it up nicely and comes full circle by saying:
It seems inescapable that the history of the fourteenth century (and quite a number of other centuries) must now begin to take account of the records that are written in both the trees and the ice. It really does appear that the key issues, previously missing in considerations of the Black Death, are comets, impacts, earthquakes, and corruption of the atmosphere[emphasis by the author]
After reading this book a lot more events in our history are starting to make sense and have made me more of a realist as far as the workings of the universe, the (relatively) fragile nature of humanity and the role comets and meteors seem to play as cosmic agents of change showing up periodically to 'stir things up'.
Indeed, change is coming to America (and the rest of the world).
I want to conclude by quoting the author in his introduction since the below has become true for me as well:
Through tree-rings, and the environmental events highlighted by them, I have become an environmental catastrophist