"Davis examines the diagnosis and treatment of GPI at four Scottish asylums between 1880 and 1930… she gives a more complete history than those that only rely on formal reports… Davis also stresses the human side of GPI… of interest to students of medical and social history." – in: SciTech Book News, March 2009 'This is a fascinating work on a form of mental impairment that prevailed in Scottish asylums until the advent of penicillin. Davis has many examples of individual cases which manifested themselves in a variety of ways. These have enabled her to uncover a picture of greater ambiguity than presented by the sanitised printed reports aimed to convey unremitting progress to a public audience." – in: Journal of Scottish Historical Studies 29/2 (2009), 145–7 "It is not often that a book is as interesting as its title suggests, but Gayle Davis’s first monograph is a fine example… a thoroughly researched, engaging, thoughtful and ultimately important work of scholarship." – in: Medical History 54/1 (Januari 2010) "Davis’s analysis of the case notes also sheds new light on the changes in clinical diagnosis of GPI, the influence of the introduction of laboratory procedures such as the Wasserman test, and a number of other topics… The book is a valuable contribution to both the literature of the history of psychiatry and the history of syphilis." – in: Social History of Medicine (2010) "This is a meticulously researched and illuminating study… It will be of interest to anyone wishing to know more about the historical relations among disease, morality, and sexuality." – in: Bulletin of the History of Medicine 84/2 (2010), 303–304