cover image Red Madness: How a Medical Mystery Changed What We Eat

Red Madness: How a Medical Mystery Changed What We Eat

Gail Jarrow. Boyds Mills/Calkins Creek, $16.95 (192p) ISBN 978-1-59078-732-8

Jarrow (The Amazing Harry Kellar: Great American Magician) takes readers on a medical detective journey full of dead ends, twists, politics, and culture as she details the story of pellagra, a deadly disease caused by niacin deficiency. Prevalent in the U.S. at the turn of the 20th century, it primarily struck the impoverished in the South (where cotton had displaced nutritious food crops). The disease causes a patterned red rash, intestinal distress, dementia, and eventually death. The author’s extensive research turns up personal stories within the story; interspersed throughout are brief vignettes of “pellagrins” like Mrs. A. Sallie Graham, a 55-year-old Virginia woman whose “health had been good until she developed a skin irritation that wouldn’t go away.... After six months, she began to forget things and wondered if she might be going insane.” These individual accounts create an urgent backdrop of suffering and death for the story of the epidemiological quest to find a cause and cure. Archival photos of sufferers of all ages are poignant and graphic. A FAQ, timeline and glossary conclude the captivating tale, which pinpoints the reason bread is enriched today. Ages 10–up. (Apr.)