The hearing-aid chair
John Harrison Curtis was a prominent nineteenth-century specialist in diseases of the eyes and ears who became an intimate of […]
I began writing this blog while researching my first book The Matter of the Heart, a popular history of heart surgery, which was published by Bodley Head in June 2017. I spent many hours reading early medical journals and found that they were full of extraordinary and often scarcely believable stories, which though irrelevant to the book seemed too good to waste. In my spare time I collected some of the most quirky, bizarre or surprising cases I encountered and published them online for others to enjoy.
The blog quickly picked up a following, and its stories were featured on other websites including Listverse and BBC Future. Eventually a selection of my favourite cases became the basis for my second book The Mystery of the Exploding Teeth.
I am no longer adding new stories to the several hundred already published – but they are collected here for you to enjoy. A complete list can be found here.
John Harrison Curtis was a prominent nineteenth-century specialist in diseases of the eyes and ears who became an intimate of […]
There’s a menace lurking in your kitchen. From The Lancet, 1868: When the attention of the Academy of Sciences of
Catalepsy is a strange condition in which the patient keeps a fixed, rigid posture, even one which looks abnormal and
One of the things that all first-aiders should know is that blades or other penetrating objects should never be removed from
We’ve already established that skipping ropes should be avoided at all costs, but it’s not all bad news for those who
If you’ve ever shared a house with a habitual sleepwalker, you may be familiar with the strange experience of having
On June 29th 1865 Jacques Roellinger, a private in ‘B’ Company of the New York Volunteers, asked to be released
In September 1762 Ann James, a fifty-five-year-old woman from Boughton Monchelsea in Kent, came to the attention of Josiah Colebroke,
Sometimes in early medical journals a case history begins conventionally enough, before turning into something startlingly unexpected. This is from
Thomas Sydenham (1624–1689) was one of the most celebrated English physicians of the seventeenth century. His Observationes Medicae (Medical Observations,