Elizabeth Armstrong Hall

Writer & Writing Coach for Kids

The Great American Medicine Show An Illustrated History of Hucksters, Healters, Health Evangelists and Heroes from Plymouth Rock to the Present (c) 1991 by Prentice-Hall Press

The Great American Medicine Show
Prentice-Hall Press, 1991

“What is most appealing about The Great American Medicine Show is its curious and delightful cast of characters. It’s a series of Horatio Alger tales, dynamic personalities from humble and often sickly backgrounds who grew wealthy and famous telling their fellow Americans how to be healthy.”
--San Francisco Chronicle

“This extensively illustrated, whimsically categorized, and wittily written compendium is distinctly oriented toward the bizarre, the ridiculous, the unusual, and the sublime: for every medical hero here, there are a dozen or more goats. As such, it is not a reference of first resort for information about the successes of medical progress, but rather an often funny, occasionally eye-opening, and clever gathering of outright fraud and zealous charlatanism.”
--Library Journal

Patent Medicines were hawked as "cure-alls" for every imaginable ailment. (Courtesy, Smithsonian Institution)


A Sampling



"The Giant in the Forest"

The making of a mud sculpture


"When Fido Has to Fly"

Flying pets overseas without putting them into quarantine


"An American Driver on British Roads"

A tale of road blocks and roundabouts


“Home Sweet Catalogue Home”
Build your own dream home in just 90 days!

“Dodging Bullets”
Civil War stories
(for kids 8-12)


“Flood Alert!” & "Flood Busters"
Don't mess with "Mother Nature"
(for kids 8-12)


The Great American Medicine Show
An illustrated history of American health reformers

The Breakfast Book
Morning munchies in 1970s-era California