

Protoz: an Parasitism of the Alimentary Tract : 

 PatJiolo(j\\ Diagnosis and Treatment. By Kenneth ^^ 



M. Lynch, pp. xvii + 256. $3.75. 1930. The cd 



Macmillan Company. ^. 



Doctor Lynch has written a handy hook for a> 



medical students, practitioners, and others con- ^^ 



nected with medicine in special ways that make o P^ 



them responsi1)le parties in the diagnosis, treat- [^ 



ment, and prevention of protozoan infections. q p 



The author's aim to write an eminently practical ^ 



treatise has led him to omit, insofar as possible, 

 •tU technical details land controversial questions ^^P ^i) 

 that mi,s:ht serve to confuse the medical man who ^^^ 

 has had little or no training in Protozoology. Pos~ ti^l^; 

 Ki1)ly he has gone a l)it too f,ar in this regard, es- ^2- 

 r^ecially in the introductory chapters. However, ^ 3 

 nmple references to the standard treatises as well ^ 

 as to special papers are given, and to some of 

 these the reader undoubtedly will wish to refer H 

 when he has finished Doctor Lynch's outline. The ^ 

 book should prove, for the audience to which it H 

 is addressed, not only thoroughly useful but also 

 thought-]3rovoking. — L. L. Woodruff. 



