Medicine and Health

  • Landmark Book 1st Edition Signed by Both Authors

    Masters, William H.; Virginia E. Johnson

    Human Sexual Response

    $2,000.00

    The Redbridge Book Co.

    Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1966.  First Edition of the co-authors’ first book. Inscribed “with compliments” and signed by both Masters and Johnson.  An uncommonly nice copy, externally fine, binding slightly cocked, edges of text block lightly foxed (not affecting internal text), slight tinge of offsetting from front flap, in a fine dust wrapper save for some light edge wear. “After many years of secretly documenting how the human body responds during sex—and coming up with remarkably effective treatments for their patients—Masters and Johnson became suddenly famous with the publication of their first landmark book. In a real sense, Masters and Johnson symbolized the triumph of modernity and medicine over religious taboos and cultural ignorance. Their “facts of life” felt far more definitive than ancient religious screeds or even Freud’s theories. Sex had left the church and entered the clinic. Instead of consulting with black-clad ministers or rabbis, Americans would rely on doctors in crisp white. At great risk to their livelihoods and reputations Masters and Johnson provided men and, particularly, women with the freedom and fundamental knowledge to make vital choices in their relationships, while highlighting medicine’s position at the forefront of social debates about human sexuality.” (The Real ‘Masters of Sex’: LIFE With Masters and Johnson; Time Magazine; July 9th, 2014)

    Offered for Sale by: The Redbridge Book Co.
  • A Founder of Johns Hopkins Medical School

    Kelly, Howard A.

    Walter Reed and Yellow Fever

    $900.00

    The Redbridge Book Co.

    Baltimore: The Norman, Remington Company, 1923.  Third Edition Revised. Likely a Christmas gift to a close colleague with a full page inscription from Kelly. Howard Atwood Kelly was one of the four founding chairs (along with William Stewart Halsted, William Osler, and William Welch) at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and creators of the Hopkins legacy.  Kelly was a clinical innovator, performing the first successful Cesarean section (C-section) in Philadelphia in 1888, and pioneered the use of radium in the treatment of gynecological cancer. The consummate clinician, his name is behind the Kelly clamp and he is the one identified with the test to find the ureter by stimulating its peristalsis by touching it with a forcep. His lasting legacy was the residency program in obstetrics and gynecology at Hopkins and the generation of leaders he trained. The recipient is almost assuredly fellow physician James R. Rankin of Muncy, Pennsylvania. In 1905, Rankin accompanied Kelly and Osler to Great Britain, “sharing with them their meetings with eminent British surgeons, attending clinics and having the honor of speaking at a banquet in London’s famous Guild Hall tendered the distinguished Americans by the Royal College of Surgeons” (Rankin obituary). A very good copy, top edge gilt, deckle edges, two interior pages severely browned from inserted news clipping.  Accompanied by the quite scarce dust wrapper, also very good, dust soiled, two small chips to spine, edge wear and a few edge tears.

    Offered for Sale by: The Redbridge Book Co.
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