Book content is being prepared. Please try again later.

Contagious Abortion of Cows by Ward J. MacNeal

(10 User reviews)   2673
By Robert Nguyen Posted on May 6, 2026
In Category - Shelf Four
MacNeal, Ward J. MacNeal, Ward J.
English
I picked up this book thinking it would be a dry, boring read about dairy cow diseases—but boy was I wrong. Ward J. MacNeal turns what sounds like a vet manual into a gripping detective story set in the early 20th century. The big mystery? *Something* is causing cows all across the US to abort their calves, and farmers are losing their livelihoods. The terror spreads like fire, nobody knows what's causing it, and vets are at war with each other over whether it's a germ or some other villain. MacNeal had me flipping pages as he unraveled how scientists tracked down the real culprit—*Brucella abortus*—and then tried to stop it. If you love 'The Hot Zone' style stories but for animal science, this one's for you. It's not just dirt and barns—it's drama, cover-ups, and heroic experiments that changed farming forever. You'll feel like you're in the lab with them, holding your breath.
Share

Read "Contagious Abortion of Cows by Ward J. MacNeal" Online

This book is available in the public domain. Start reading the digital edition below.

Book Preview

A short preview of the book’s content is shown below to give you an idea of its style and themes.

This is a limited preview for informational purposes only. Download the full book to access the complete content.

This is a limited preview. Download the book to read the full content.

Okay, so it's exactly what the title says: this book is about solving the raging outbreak of aborted calves that terrorized American farmers over a hundred years ago. And yes, I started it while side-eyeing the cover. But MacNeal writes with such a reporter's urgency that you'll be hooked by chapter two.

The Story

He welcomes us into a crisis: cows dropping their calves left and right, and no one—not the breeders, not the local vets, not the big-city experts—knew why. He tells us about the first hunters of the unknown culprit, a French outfit biding time with live cultures, and the rush to isolate a tiny, invisible storm that kept popping up in bizarre places: manure, bedding, even the it of dirt left under fingernails. MacNeal walks us through their hypotheses, from lousy feed being the problem to it 'probably just part of farming'—before the camp that said it was an infectious germ won big time. It’s genuinely tense: Would their discoveries pass the test at the Bureau of Animal Industry? Would scientists lock in on the wrong culprit entirely? Plus, MacNeal shares their back-against-wall fixes that included live vaccines straight outa biology heaven for the twenties.

Why You Should Read It

First, because going inside a historic science-mystery like this gives you fresh appreciation for humans trying to figure anything out. The vulnerability the farmers show (you’ll get true quotes from them, heartbreaking) contrasts with the almost sneaky thrill of science sleuthing. Second, this is writing that feels alive—it doesn't drown you in technical terms without warning, yet it fulfills the whole 'I want to understand the disease dynamic' urge. I fell hardest for the themes of control: how even old-time researchers had battles balancing animal trust, profits, and their own theories. Real life never felt more urgent than Wilbur's race to manufacture vaccine in that tiny lab against government pushback. It’s amazing underdog energy, I promise.

Final Verdict

I recommend this to three specific people: anyone whose browsing history screams 'history of epidemiology' (with a coauthor disease alert!)... but also to fans of breakthrough-before-the-truth medicine stories like 'The Birth of the Pill' or 'Venomous.' Also: to farmers doubting prevention (get this to make sense of herd health from ground zero). But for readers weary of sex scenes, brutal violence or fantasy? It's brisk realism in under 300 pages. Just do it: read it, scribble notes if you must. Your brain will thank you—a little adrenaline can live perfectly alongside animal science now.



🔖 Public Domain Notice

This title is part of the public domain archive. Feel free to use it for personal or commercial purposes.

Paul Lee
3 months ago

The research depth is palpable from the very first chapter.

William Johnson
1 year ago

I decided to give this a try based on a colleague's recommendation, the author clearly has a deep mastery of the subject matter. I'm glad I chose this over the other alternatives.

William Garcia
2 months ago

A brilliant read that I finished in one sitting.

David White
4 months ago

I decided to give this a try based on a colleague's recommendation, the wealth of information provided exceeds the average market standard. Top-tier content that deserves more recognition.

Ashley Lopez
8 months ago

Thought-provoking and well-organized content.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (10 User reviews )

Add a Review

Your Rating *

Related eBooks