With superb investigative skill and a delightfully light-hearted writing style, Spinney extends her analysis far beyond the relatively short duration of the plague... Ive seldom had so much fun reading about people dying. * The Times * Weaves together global history and medical science to great effect ... Riveting. * Sunday Times * Both a saga of tragedies and a detective story... Pale Rider is not just an excavation but a reimagining of the past. * Guardian * Vividly recreated, grimly fascinating Coolly, crisply and with a consistently sharp eye for the telling anecdote, Spinney ... demonstrates how the Spanish flu cast a long shadow over the 20th century. * Daily Mail * Magisterial. * Observer * Impressive... packed with fascinating, quirky detail... As the centenary of this monumental event approaches, other volumes on the pandemic will undoubtedly appear. Pale Rider sets the bar very high. * Nature * Influenza, like all viruses, is a parasite. Laura Spinney traces its long shadow over human history In Europe and North America the first world war killed more than Spanish flu; everywhere else the reverse is true. Yet most narratives focus on the West Ms Spinneys book goes some way to redress the balance. * The Economist * Laura Spinney provides a vivid account of the medical mysteries surrounding this exceptionally lethal disease and its long-term consequences. The main fascination of her wonderfully absorbing book lies in its international comparisons, reinforced by harrowing narratives of personal experiences Pale Rider offers an important if unsettling reminder that stories about epidemics cannot be safely relegated to the past. -- Patricia Fara * BBC History Magazine * Engaging, delivering the necessary science in the tone of a trendy lecturer who is chatty and informal but always authoritative The post-war world created treaties, organisations and protest groups to prevent global conflict recurring, yet the centurys biggest killer may have been something else entirely. This fascinating, frightening book will begin to redress that dangerous historical imbalance. -- Julie McDowall * Herald * Spinney, an admired science journalist, conjures the drama of the Spanish flu Pale Rider is not just an excavation but a reimagining of the past The renowned virologist John Oxford concurs: H1N1 has a proven capacity to kill, he says, and we dont need to be sitting here taking it like they did in 1918. Spinney has ably lent her pen to the cause. -- Colin Grant * Guardian * Spinneys book provides a masterful account of the possible origins, spread and cultural consequences of this modern-day plague. Especially interesting are the context-providing sections on humanitys millennia-old encounter with flu and on the frantic, flawed, attempts to understand the science behind the outbreak. -- Jon Wright * Geographical * No one has yet to take as wide-sweeping an approach as Laura Spinney does in her new book, Pale Rider. Spinneyis a storyteller with a science writers cabinet of facts. -- Suzanna Shablovsky * Science * [ T]he best modern account of the Spanish Flu crisis -- Martin Kettle * Guardian * A terrific, sweeping account of something thats much more important than most people think * Evening Standard *