The Liquid of Life
MichaelWebster
あらすじ
At the height of the Second World War, as the world bled on an unprecedented scale, one man engineered the system that would save it. Dr. Charles Richard Drew was the medical pioneer who transformed blood from a volatile, localized substance into a standardized global resource. Yet, as he perfected the logistics of the modern blood bank, he found himself locked in a bitter struggle with the very nation he served-a nation that insisted on segregating the life-saving plasma he had spent his career mastering. This comprehensive biography moves beyond the clinical breakthroughs to reveal the man behind the white coat: the elite athlete, the uncompromising educator, and the civil rights advocate who navigated the crushing weight of Jim Crow America with a philosophy of aggressive excellence. From the laboratories of Columbia University to the segregated wards of Freedmen's Hospital, it explores a life dedicated to the biological truth that blood knows no racial boundary. Through meticulous research and deep analysis, this book reconstructs Drew's revolutionary work, debunks the persistent myths surrounding his tragic death in 1950, and examines a legacy that continues to flow through the veins of modern medicine. It is the story of a titan who refused to let prejudice dictate the limits of human potential, proving that the architecture of survival is built on a universal and sacred trust. Approx.155 pages, 35800 word count

