Plague
A Story of Smallpox in Montreal
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of Toronto Press
Published:3rd Mar '26
£16.99
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In January 1885, as the people of Montreal celebrated one of the greatest winter carnivals of the century, a deadly epidemic inched its way through the city streets. When the case of a railway porter suffering from smallpox was gravely mishandled, what followed was a “carnival of death” causing the preventable demise of over 3,000 Montrealers.
In Plague, historian Michael Bliss uncovers one of the most remarkable untold stories in Canadian history. Crafted through thorough and comprehensive research, Bliss recounts this tale of carnage and humanity in an engaging and vividly detailed format. Now updated with a foreword by infectious diseases expert Gerald A. Evans, this new edition of Plague puts forth an unflinching portrayal of the city of Montreal featuring quack doctors, French-Canadian strongmen, black-robed priests, crusading journalists, Louis Riel, and more.
Bliss depicts how every single death could have been avoided through vaccination even as the epidemic turned people against each other. The book shows how troops had to be called upon to guard smallpox hospitals against anti-vaccination rioters. In an uncanny mirroring of modern day, the whole city of Montreal was quarantined by the rest of North America as a charnel house of disease and death.
Bliss paints a picture of a Montreal routed by divisions and brought to its knees by an epidemic. By bringing to life the last epidemic of smallpox to devastate a city in the Western world, he writes a stark history of life, living, and the human condition. This book is a thriller, a horror story, and a parable about the infectious diseases that have shocked our times.
“While smallpox has been eradicated, nearly all events that unfolded in Plague have been repeated in similar form in recent years. This is an enduring cautionary tale about the challenges and importance of advancing public health for vaccine-preventable infectious diseases. The cost of failure is often borne by society’s most vulnerable. While science is crucial, Bliss’s account demonstrates that without proper community engagement and political will, the science will be ineffectual. This is essential reading.” -- Justin Chan, MD MPH, Associate Professor of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases & Immunology, NYU Grossman School of Medicine
“This compelling and exceptionally written book about a city and its local government grappling with a preventable and unrelenting pandemic in the face of disinformation, anti-vaccination propaganda, and political tension is timely and relevant today. How Montreal grappled with smallpox in 1885 is fascinating in its own right and has powerful insights as we collectively struggle with our post-Covid society and politics today.” -- David Miller, former mayor of the City of Toronto and Managing Director, C40 Centre
ISBN: 9781049801377
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 25mm
Weight: 1g
372 pages