The immortalists

Charles Lindbergh, Dr. Alexis Carrel, and their daring quest to live forever

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Last edited by Tom Morris
March 20, 2024 | History

The immortalists

Charles Lindbergh, Dr. Alexis Carrel, and their daring quest to live forever

  • 0 Ratings
  • 2 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 1 Have read

The true story of how, 75 years ago, two men--one the most famous man in the world, the other thought by many to be the world's smartest--searched for a scientific path to a life without death. In 1927 Lindbergh was the first person to fly non-stop from New York to Paris, a feat most people then thought impossible. In 1930, Lindbergh met Alexis Carrel, then regarded as the most brilliant doctor who ever lived. Lindbergh's sister-in-law suffered from a heart condition that her doctors deemed hopeless, and he didn't understand why they could not simply replace her heart with a mechanical pump. Carrel himself was pursuing similar ideas, and a friendship and scientific partnership began, attempting to build a machine that could keep whole organs alive. They thought that this process could potentially render certain chosen human beings immortal.

Publish Date
Publisher
JR
Language
English
Pages
337

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Previews available in: English

Book Details


Edition Notes

Originally published: New York: Ecco, 2007.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Published in
London

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
610.28
Library of Congress
R855.3.F75 2008

The Physical Object

Pagination
x, 337 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates
Number of pages
337

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL32107593M
Internet Archive
immortalistschar0000frie
ISBN 10
1906217483
ISBN 13
9781906217488
OCLC/WorldCat
220009261
Amazon ID (ASIN)

Work Description

He was one of the most famous men of the twentieth century, the subject of best–selling biographies and a hit movie, as well as the inspiration for a dance step – the Lindy Hop – he himself was too shy to try. But for all the attention lavished on Charles Lindbergh, one story has remained untold until now: his macabre scientific collaboration with Dr. Alexis Carrel. Together this oddest of couples – one a brilliant surgeon turned social engineer, the other a failed dirt farmer turned hero of the skies – embarked on a secret quest to achieve immortality.Their endeavor began on November 28, 1930, in Carrel's laboratory at the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research in New York, a haven created by the world's richest man, John D. Rockefeller, so that medical investigators could pursue their wildest dreams, freed from the demands of clinical practice. For Carrel, who won the Nobel Prize in 1912 for pioneering organ transplants, that dream was conquering death. But not for everyone – only a special few.In one of his more ghoulish experiments, Carrel removed the heart from a chick embryo and placed it in a glass jar, where, with special cleansing and feeding, he kept it alive, with no signs of aging, far beyond the species' natural life span. That result, Carrel believed, suggested that natural death wasn't inevitable.But to attempt such a test with humans, Carrel needed a mechanical genius to create a device in which severed human organs could live and function indefinitely. Might that genius be the handsome pilot who astonished the world in May 1927 by flying alone across the Atlantic – a feat even most pilots had thought impossible – in a single–engine airplane he designed himself?Part Frankenstein, part The Professor and the Madman, and all true, The Immortalists is the remarkable story of how two men of prodigious achievement, and equally large character flaws, challenged nature's oldest rule, with consequences – personal, professional, and political – neither man anticipated.

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History

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March 20, 2024 Edited by Tom Morris merge authors
March 20, 2024 Edited by Tom Morris Merge works
December 25, 2021 Edited by ImportBot import existing book
July 22, 2019 Edited by MARC Bot remove fake subjects
December 9, 2009 Created by WorkBot add works page