Allusions can bring history into many types of literature. They compare and illustrate situations, people, and many other parts of a story to better the audience’s understanding of the connotation being presented. For example, the book The Hot Zone, portrays many examples of allusion. In this novel, scientists from all over the world research to find the natural host and the end to the Ebola virus and its sister, the Marburg virus. Many people and events in history are used to describe the way the
The central idea of Richard Preston’s The Hot Zone is that the outbreaks of many deadly hot agents are due to the oversight of humans. Preston conveys his message through detailed descriptions of simple mistakes that characters make. One instance of human oversight that he wrote about was the usage of dirty needles in the hospitals of Sudan, leading to a massive outbreak of Ebola Sudan. The virus “hit the hospital like a bomb” and “transformed the hospital at Maridi into a morgue” all because “the
The #1 New York Times Bestseller, The Hot Zone, authored by Richard Preston works with its main goal of educating society on the sinister topic of the Ebola virus. It endeavors and adequately completes its goal to reveal the terrifying truth of the origins of this pernicious virus to the whole of society. It is due to the fact that the Ebola Virus is both highly deadly as well as an infectious disease that it comes as no surprise that it is characterized as an exotic “hot” virus. While the book takes
The Hot Zone, by Richard Preston is a nonfiction thriller focusing on Level Four hot virus, Ebola. The story is broken up into multiple “mini-passages” that depict the discovery of the extremely dangerous virus. The scientists mainly affiliated with Ebola were introduced and so were their efforts to educate themselves on its characteristics, prevention methods to avoid panic on national levels, and human catastrophe. Charles Monet, a man with a French nationality residing in Africa, starts the
The Hot Zone, written by Richard Preston, is an intriguing, and true, novel about the origins of the Ebola virus. It is a dramatic horror story about a deadly virus, first only found in the dense rain forest of Africa that somehow traveled thousands of miles to Washington, D.C. In only a few days, the virus spread and killed more than 90 percent of its victims. This book keeps you on the edge of your seat, in fear that yet another person will suffer from this terrible, contagious disease. The book
that explains the severity of dealing with Ebola. The Hot Zone starts in Africa with a man named Charles Monet, who ends up dying in a hospital waiting room, later, after examining his blood they found he had a strain of Ebola. Next it moves to Reston, Virginia to a monkey house. After the first outbreak, involving the CDC and the army, the virus in that facility seemed to be gone. The virus came back again, because the company continued to purchase
is caused by infection with a virus of the family Filoviridae, genus Ebolavirus which five have been identified as Ebola virus species, four of which are found in humans: Ebola virus (Zaire ebolavirus); Sudan virus (Sudan ebolavirus); Taï Forest virus (Taï Forest ebolavirus, formerly Côte d’Ivoire ebolavirus); and Bundibugyo virus (Bundibugyo ebolavirus) (About Ebola Virus Disease, 2015). The fifth, Reston virus (Reston ebolavirus), was found in nonhuman primates (About Ebola Virus Disease, 2015)
my existence, when I picked up Richard Preston’s The Hot Zone. The title page boasted that it was “a terrifying true story”. Try me, I thought. I was not prepared. In 1989, a new strain of ebolavirus wreaked havoc in a monkey house in Reston, Virginia, only a few miles from where I currently live. Ebola Reston has a 90% mortality rate and
In late 2014 Ebola was all over the news. Everywhere telling about how it is spreading all over Africa and even starting to come to the United States. Today Ebola is still a problem, a disease which most people do not know much about it, other than it is scary. Ebola has a lot more to it other than just that, with its own history, symptoms and tries for a cure and its effect on society. Ebola has a history that dates all the way back to 1976. According to the World Health Organization website the