A self-taught scientist determined to bring science out of the laboratory and into the practical arena, French-Canadian Felix dHerelle (1873-1949) made history in two different fields of biology. Not only was he first to demonstrate the use and application of bacteria for biological control of insect pests, he also became a seminal figure in the history of molecular biology. This engaging book is the first full biography of dHerelle, a complex figure who emulated Louis Pasteur and influenced the course of twentieth-century biology, yet remained a controversial outsider to the scientific community.
Drawing on family papers, archival sources, interviews, and dHerelles published and unpublished writings, Dr. William C. Summers tells the fascinating story of the scientists life and the work that took him around the globe. In 1917, dHerelle published the first paper describing the phenomenon of the bacteriophage and its biological nature. A series of more than 110 articles and 6 major books followed, in which dHerelle established the foundation for the later work of the Phage Group in molecular biology. Yet dHerelle sometimes inspired animosity in others--he was drummed out of the Pasteur Institute, he held only one brief permanent position in the scientific establishment (at Yale University from 1928 to 1933), and he was bewildered by the social nuances of the world of international science. His story is more than the biography of a single brilliant scientist; it is also a fascinating chapter in the history of biology.
William C. Summers, M.D., is professor of therapeutic radiology; molecular biophysics and biochemistry; genetics; and in the graduate program in history of medicine and science at Yale University. He is also lecturer in history at Yale University and editor-in-chief of theYale Journal of Biology and Medicine.
Awarded an honorable mention for the 1999 Professional/Scholarly Publishing Anló›