Mar. 26th, 2025

lirazel: Lamia from the film Stardust ([film] stardust)
Choose 20 books that have stayed with you or influenced you, 1 book per day for 20 days, in no particular order. No explanations, no reviews: just covers.



Glinda of Oz by L. Frank Baum
lirazel: The three Bronte sisters as portrayed in To Walk Invisible looking out over the moor ([tv] three suns)
What I finished:

Everything Is Tuberculosis by John Green. Okay, I'll be honest: I was a tiiiny bit disappointed by this book but only because it was so short! It's barely over 200 pages and, I'm sorry, that was simply not enough for me! I do think it was probably a strategic decision--Green clearly has an agenda with this book, and it's to get people to care about global health in general and tuberculosis in particular, and he probably thinks more people will read it if it's short. Which is probably true! And I respect that! It might well have been the right choice! But there should have been a director's cut for those of us who wanted more of what we got.

What we got: three interweaving strands: (short forms of) the cultural history of tuberculosis, the medical history of it, and the history of one particular TB patient Green met in Sierra Leone and formed a close relationship with.

Green provides a number of examples of the ways in which TB has affected human history, from getting New Mexico its statehood to the start of World War I (kinda). He talks about the different ways Westerners, in particular, have thought about it depending on who is affected by it--how it was romanticized in the 19th century when anyone could get it, but then, once it became mostly eradicated among the rich and white, how it became a shameful disease when it was associated with the poor and non-white.

He also talks about the many different ways people have attempted to cure it throughout history, including the treatments we finally developed that should have eradicated it from the planet. He's very clear that we absolutely have the means to rid ourselves of it almost entirely but we have chosen not to because of the way our global economy works. He repeats the words of a doctor he respects over and over: "The disease is where the cure is not, and the cure is where the disease is not." This is very effective because I honestly didn't know it was still killing so many people.

Nor was I aware that some estimates say that it's killed a full one fourth of all the people who ever lived. This is, of course, difficult to wrap the mind around, and Green knows and acknowledges that while one death is a tragedy, a million deaths are a statistic. That's why he tells the story of Henry, his friend who he met in a clinic in Lakka. Henry is a wonderful choice for a main character--lovable, funny, talented, but also very honest about the darkness of his experiences--and I suspect Green picked him both because he knew he would be such a good way into the story and also because he clearly loves him very much. Henry has a particular kind of TB that's resistant to the most common treatments, and the question of whether he will survive propels you forward as a reader.

So yeah, what's here is good! But it left me wanting so much more! I will definitely seek out other books about TB, but I enjoy Green's non-fiction writing enough that I'm surprised that there isn't more from him here. Still, well worth reading as an introduction to TB for a general reader, though if you know more about it than I did (my knowledge being mostly related to Victorian and Edwardian Britain and yes, I have chosen this icon for this post for a reason), you might not find a lot that's new to you.

What I'm currently reading:

Still meandering through The Historian and reading The Jesus Machine in spurts.

May 2025

S M T W T F S
    123
4 56 78910
11 1213 14 151617
1819 20 21222324
25262728293031

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated May. 22nd, 2025 01:28 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios