"In a day of deadly monographs written by historians for historians, it is a pleasure to read a biography that does not look for an angle but simply presents the subject’s life in the grand 19th-century style of the life and the times. The writing is excellent and the pictures Ward presents of the antebellum South, Civil War medicine, Reconstruction, and conditions in the New York City tenements are accurate…. This biography gives us a remarkable insight into the life of a 19th-century physician and the world in which he lived.”
–John Duffy, author of The Healers: A History of American Medicine
"In this fine biography, Ward recounts the life and times of Simon Baruch, a nineteenth-century physician best known today for his advocacy of public baths. A Prussian-Polish Jewish teenage immigrant who came to the United States in 1855, Baruch became a prominent and controversial figure in American medicine…. Ward has skillfully blended primary and secondary sources to produce a vivid account of Civil War and South Carolina Reconstruction medicine, and of Baruch's many crusades to improve medical practice and to alleviate the suffering of the urban poor."
—Bulletin of the History of Medicine
“As Patricia Spain Ward shows in her new biography of Dr Simon Baruch, it is possible to use such an exceptional figure to illustrate an individual life and how American medicine was taught, practised, and advanced from the mid nineteenth century to the early twentieth century…. Simon Baruch, Rebel in the Ranks of Medicine, 1840-1921 is a fine biography that documents both a unique medical life and the context in which it occurred."
—Medical History