Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Everything Is Tuberculosis: The History and Persistence of Our Deadliest Infection
Everything Is Tuberculosis: The History and Persistence of Our Deadliest Infection | John Green
40 posts | 30 read | 32 to read
John Green, the #1 bestselling author of The Anthropocene Reviewed and a passionate advocate for global healthcare reform, tells a deeply human story illuminating the fight against the world's deadliest disease. Tuberculosis has been entwined with humanity for millennia. Once romanticized as a malady of poets, today tuberculosis is a disease of poverty that walks the trails of injustice and inequity we blazed for it. In 2019, John Green met Henry, a young tuberculosis patient at Lakka Government Hospital in Sierra Leone while traveling with Partners in Health. John became fast friends with Henry, a boy with spindly legs and a big, goofy smile. In the years since that first visit to Lakka, Green has become a vocal and dynamic advocate for increased access to treatment and wider awareness of the healthcare inequities that allow this curable, treatable infectious disease to also be the deadliest, killing 1.5 million people every year. In Everything is Tuberculosis, John tells Henry's story, woven through with the scientific and social histories of how tuberculosis has shaped our world and how our choices will shape the future of tuberculosis.
LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
underground_bks
post image
Pickpick

Powerful, expansive, clear, compellingly told, heartbreaking, and yet hopeful, by the end of this short yet transformative read, you‘ll be agreeing with John Green: everything is tuberculosis.

Pruzy Do you think someone with higher ed in medical science (me) would still find this interesting? I‘m worried it might be too simplistic! 6d
underground_bks @Pruzy absolutely!! The science is just one of the threads within a larger story 6d
Pruzy @underground_bks Great thanks! (tbh I already added it to my tbr after reading your review!) 6d
27 likes1 stack add3 comments
review
Scochrane26
post image
Pickpick

I love John Green, especially when I listen to him. I wasn‘t sure if I was that interested in learning about TB, but it‘s John Green, so I decided to. The personal story woven throughout about Henry gives you someone to root for. The history & current lack of availability to treatment makes you mad. Of course, this was written before the US withdrew from WHO & shut down USAID, so I couldn‘t help but think of how many more are dying right now. 👇

Scochrane26 Really a great book to educate us all about global health & what we can do. 5⭐️ 7d
VioletBramble I also thought about all those patients and family members who won't be getting badly needed medications because USAID was dismantled. 3d
28 likes2 comments
review
behudd
post image
Pickpick

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
I love John Green‘s nonfiction. He brings so much humanity, research, & heart to a topic so fundamentally grounded in racism & inequity.
The author reads the audiobook, and it‘s John Green, so it‘s a great listen.
There was so much new-to-me information in this book, and I‘m glad Sharon McMahon chose it for her book club.
I can‘t wait to meet with Green & hear the discussion.

behudd @TheAromaofBooks this was my June #doublespin book! 1w
TheAromaofBooks Woohoo!! 7d
34 likes2 comments
review
DebinHawaii
post image
Pickpick

#Read100 #MonthlyNonFiction2025

Finished a few weeks ago. When I was in kindergarten we had to have a TB skin test where we lined up. The nurse(?) administering it told me “to watch the bubble” & I promptly passed out. I woke up on a cot, was forced to drink the carton of warm whole milk that was sitting outside class in a wagon all morning & eat a graham cracker & the entire experience left me with a decades long phobia of needles & seeing ⬇️

DebinHawaii … them as well as a long-standing aversion to milk & a hesitant (okay in crust or s‘mores) relationship to graham crackers. This traumatic episode & the fact that I‘ve not read John Green before made it unclear why I felt the need to put the ebook of this book about TB on library hold 🤷🏻‍♀️ but I‘m glad I did. It was actually a quite interesting & compelling look at a disease that is considered the world‘s deadliest. ⬇️ 2w
DebinHawaii …That it is a curable disease but there is such disparate care given based on economic & racial inequality & greed is beyond angering. This book doesn‘t go too deep into the science so it‘s accessible & Green personalizes the story by following the path of a young patient in Sierra Leone. An important book & just an excellent read, this will be a top title for me this year & maybe get me to read more Green. 2w
DieAReader 🥳🥳🥳 2w
julieclair Excellent review. And what a sad story about your personal experience with the TB vaccine and the lingering after effects. 💝 1w
57 likes1 stack add4 comments
blurb
MatchlessMarie
post image

Hooray, I found all the April #WickedWords

quote
behudd
post image

“Around the turn of the nineteenth century, the Scottish tinkerer and chemist James Watt began working on a new project.”

#FirstLineFridays
@ShyBookOwl

blurb
willaful
post image

A powerful listening experience. It's a sad, horrific, true story of the massive consequences of health inequality, told with humanity and grace. I understand now why this became his cause, and there's hope in the fact that so much has and still can be done to help. (Though as an American, it's hard not to fear we've taken such a wrong turn, we soon won't even be able to help ourselves.)

#RealHistory #HonestHistory #MonthlyNonfiction2025

Librarybelle On my to read list! 2w
julieclair This sounds like an important read. 2w
willaful @julieclair So important. 2w
29 likes3 comments
quote
willaful

And so we have entered a strange era of human history: A preventable, curable infectious disease remains our deadliest. That's the world we are currently choosing.

shanaqui John Green spoke so much truth in this one. Tuberculosis is a completely solveable problem, and receives such stinking little funding. Ugh. 3w
willaful @shanaqui It's devastating. The part about people giving up treatment because getting well made them unbearably hungry and no money is allocated to food makes me want to scream. (edited) 3w
shanaqui @willaful That particular fact wasn't mentioned directly in my TB course (it's one of my electives, the most difficult/high-level one I'm taking actually), but one thing we've learned that Green doesn't quite explain: a large portion of the problems for people with TB are solved by giving them money. Just money. Not surveillance (which is what the current treatment protocol amounts to) or sage advice. Just. Money. 3w
See All 6 Comments
shanaqui And we don't give it to them except in a few small pilot studies where it was wildly successful but declared to be unsustainable. So what, the high treatment failure/inability to comply is sustainable? NO.

Also, what would prevent the majority of TB? You've probably guessed it from the rant so far... yep... money. Better housing, and give people money. The most cost-effective thing to do issssss moneeeyyyyyyyyyyyyyy.
3w
willaful @shanaqui Pretty much always... 3w
Faranae Universal/Unconditional basic income solves so very, very many problems it's a bit frightening. Or enraging. Oh look, I'll be doing my annual Thomas Spence reading next month, perhaps I should build up to it with Mutual Aid since I don't think there's any still-accurate public domain works on TB (well, maybe London Labour and the London Poor, but that's a little long...) 3w
25 likes6 comments
review
JoeMo
post image
Pickpick

This was an interesting and heartbreaking work about the history of tuberculosis and how it is treated very differently today depending on what part of the world you live in. It will also be interesting to see if Green researches and writes more nonfiction books like this.

#bookspinbingo @TheAromaofBooks

Amiable I‘m on the library waitlist for this —glad to hear that it‘s a good one. 4w
TheAromaofBooks Woohoo!! 4w
36 likes2 comments
review
Chelsea.Poole
post image
Pickpick

John Green is a national treasure. His take on how tuberculosis has affected our world and tells about a young individual who is suffering from this disease CURRENTLY to illustrate societal and global health issues, greed, modern medicine, history —and romanization— of the disease (consumption), medical and pharmaceutical industry (corruption), personal stories and so much more (TB gave us Adirondack chairs!). I absolutely loved this!

Scochrane26 I finally got to check this out from the library—I‘ve been on hold for the audio. Will be able to start it tomorrow or Wednesday. I agree that he‘s a national treasure. 1mo
96 likes5 stack adds1 comment
blurb
totefairie
post image
review
Jas16
post image
Pickpick

Did I anticipate that in 2025 I would wait weeks for a hold on an audiobook about tuberculosis to come in from the library and, when it finally did, I would be so interested I would listen to it in record time? Not a chance but such is the power of John Green.

Chelsea.Poole I‘m listening to this now and I love it! John Green can do no wrong. Have you read his other NF? I always give out ratings in my mind for random objects thanks to it. 1mo
sarahbarnes Not something I would gravitate toward but your review has me intrigued! 1mo
Jas16 @Chelsea.Poole I have read and was surprised by how much I loved it although I probably shouldn‘t have been. It definitely convinced me to give whatever he writes a try. 1mo
Jas16 @sarahbarnes I can definitely understand why it wouldn‘t jump out to you as a must read based on title alone but it was the exact type of informative but engaging nonfiction that works for me. 1mo
sarahbarnes I put myself on a long hold list at the library for it! 😁 1mo
49 likes1 stack add5 comments
review
britt_brooke
post image
Pickpick

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

An important glimpse into healthcare disparities.

Mirazzles I loved this one! I learned so much I didn‘t know 2mo
69 likes3 stack adds2 comments
blurb
JenniferEgnor
post image
review
limada
post image
Pickpick

I've not spent a lot of time thinking about Tuberculosis, beyond having to have TB testing before I could start my roles in Healthcare facilities. It's an interesting history, and deserves more consideration now as it should have been eradicated many years ago, if not for inequities in the global system. This is an interesting read, if you're a little bit interested. #19-2025

blurb
thegirlwiththelibrarybag
post image

Last weeks book chat books… I‘m trying to read more nonfiction books this year - so I was quite pleased to talk about 2 this month. Was super pleased that Everything is Tuberculosis sparked a great conversation with more than one attendee revealing that they had a parent who‘d survived TB… the colleague I‘ve done book chats with for the last year - her contract is finishing - I‘m going to miss her!

review
ElizaMarie
post image
Pickpick

Ooo, really well written. I hope John Green writes more of these types of books!

#OffTheShelf2025
@Librariana

#NonFiction

28 likes1 stack add
review
Mattsbookaday
post image
Pickpick

Everything Is Tuberculosis, by John Green (2025)

Premise: A popular-level take on the history, science, and increasingly sociology, of humanity‘s deadliest disease.

Review: The Green brothers just seem like genuinely delightful, whip-smart, gracious, and deeply curious people, and this book hits on all those strengths. Cont.

Mattsbookaday As someone who works in public health, I appreciated the focus in the later chapters on the social determinants of health and the things we as a culture could do to stop this awful disease in its tracks, if only we chose to make it a priority.

Rating: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
2mo
7 likes1 comment
review
AvidReader25
post image
Pickpick

Focusing on Henry, who is fighting TB in Sierra Leone, Green weaves his real experience with the history of tuberculosis & its far-reaching impact. He manages to bring humanity to a topic that could feel sterile in less gifted hands. He explores the stigmatization of the disease, both as an exclusion from society and as a glorified for the artistic. Like all his work, its beauty lies in his understanding of both humanity's flaws and strengths.

Tamra It‘s a shame we‘re still fighting this disease and with the attitude in the US toward public health, I‘m less hopeful. 2mo
AvidReader25 @Tamra isn‘t that disheartening! But at least it‘s inspiring to see that one person can develop a passion for fighting it and make some actual changes by raising awareness. 2mo
33 likes2 comments
blurb
JenniferEgnor
post image

A more in depth conversation with the author of the new book ‘Everything Is Tuberculosis‘. I can‘t wait to read it! 🩸💉
Link to listen: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/99-invisible/id394775318?i=1000695605705

blurb
JenniferEgnor
post image

Everyone is talking about this book and I can‘t wait to read it! I‘ve always had a weird fascination with this famous, deadly, and historical disease. *This is one of the many reasons why USAID matters, Musk be damned.
Link for this podcast episode: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/nprs-book-of-the-day/id1587369865?i=100070...

review
RainyDayReading
post image
Pickpick

At first I wasn‘t sure about this when I picked it up since it‘s YA and I don‘t always gel with it, but I think this being aimed at a YA audience makes the subject much more accessible for those unfamiliar with TB and I found myself enjoying reading it. It made for a fascinating time since in the past I‘ve seen TB discussed from a historical angle and not from the present day like this one where it is still very much a problem in our world ⬇️

RainyDayReading Overall I think John Green did a really good job with this and provided me with so much new information I wasn‘t aware of with regards to TB. Highly recommend giving this book a chance regardless of whether you read YA, adult, fiction or nonfiction. 2mo
melissajayne Is it the same author as Paper Towns, Turtles All the way Down? 2mo
marleed Reading it and even knowing he writes YA fiction, I never even thought to consider this YA which likely speaks to my profound lack of knowledge on the subject going in🤣 2mo
See All 9 Comments
RainyDayReading @marleed I‘m hesitant with YA nonfiction sometimes because in the past I‘ve tried a few where the author/tone came across as talking down to the reader/teen which didn‘t sit all that well with me. But thankfully Green didn‘t do that! It was such a relief. I didn‘t realize it was YA till it came in from the library with the YA sticker on it 🤣 So without that I‘m not sure I would‘ve known and just assumed this was another adult nonfiction of his. 2mo
melissajayne @RainyDayReading thanks; I wasn‘t sure 2mo
thegirlwiththelibrarybag Are you sure the library didn‘t just put a YA sticker on it because he‘s primarily known for his YA novels? 2mo
RainyDayReading @thegirlwiththelibrarybag I don‘t think so because by that logic they would also put a YA sticker on his other nonfiction title The Anthropocene Reviewed which is an adult nonfiction/shelved in the adult section. Plus this book was published by Crash Course Books which is an imprint of Penguin Young Readers which aims its materials at kids up to young adults. So I think the sticker is accurate. 2mo
thegirlwiththelibrarybag @RainyDayReading, my library had it as adult nonfiction. Interesting about the publishing imprint though - I hadn‘t noticed that. 2mo
29 likes1 stack add9 comments
quote
NotCool

The disease was framed, as disease so often has been, as a moral quandary; if you don‘t wear high heels, and you don‘t live unnaturally in the city, and you don‘t drink, and you don‘t cry at night when you‘re 4 years old and miss your mother, then you will survive.

quote
NotCool
post image

Death is natural. Children dying is natural. None of us actually want to live in a natural world. Treating disease is unnatural….and yet we tell ourselves that some, and only some, lives end naturally, which means acceptably.

review
ChaoticMissAdventures
post image
Pickpick

This is really very good. Green reads the audiobook, which if you are a fan you will enjoy. I loved the mixture of history, little trivia facts, and heart wrenching personal stories. There is just enough levity here to not have the facts and heart of the book take you down. But the information is here and it is easy to see the urgency and why Green is so obsessed.
4.5/5

review
thegirlwiththelibrarybag
post image
Pickpick

“And so we have entered a strange era of human history: A preventable, curable infectious disease remains our deadliest. That's the world we are currently choosing.“

I didn‘t have a book about tuberculosis being my most anticipated read for the year on my bingo card but I‘ve never felt more invested in following John Green down his TB rabbit hole.

50 likes2 stack adds
blurb
marleed
post image

I haven‘t verified but from a solid B,4⭐️ to A+,5⭐️ this might be my overall highest rated grid of 2025. The fiction was all so good and the one non-fiction so unexpectedly interesting that I had to tag it.

5* = Loved It, want to shout out loud about this book! I do/will own/keep a physical copy. A+
4*= I liked it, would love to discuss. Solid B
3*=Meh, no need to discuss. Avg C
2*=Nope D
1*=DNF F

GinaKButler That sounds like some great reading! ❤️ 3mo
marleed @GinaKButler I feel so lucky when I thoroughly enjoy every book in a grid! 3mo
69 likes2 comments
review
marleed
post image
Pickpick

I am essentially a medical illiterate and my understanding of tuberculosis began and ended with knowing the abbreviation is TB. I couldn‘t resist being enlightened on this topic by John Green. I was hooked the whole way through and humbled by my ignorance on this topic. I now really want to visit the YouTube channel of Henry Reider.

ChaoticMissAdventures I love how truly obsessed he is with the topic. In high school I worked at a hospital and once a year we had to be tested for it so it has always been in the back of my mind but I am excited to read JG's take on how it connects to pretty much everything. 3mo
TEArificbooks When I was a teacher we had to be tested for it every year and my hubby that works in a hospital also has to be tested every year. I was thinking of getting this book since there is an outbreak in the states and two people died despite modern medicine 3mo
marleed @ChaoticMissAdventures @TEArificbooks Ha - I wish I knew what you know. This Jan I couldn‘t kick a lingering cough. Then in Feb I fell ill and for the 1st time ever tested positive for the flu. On a family FaceTime the night prior to the +test, I apologized for coughing and hoped I didn‘t have TB since the county adjacent had the highest new cases in the country. A nephew laughed and assured me I didn‘t have TB. So this book‘s timing! 3mo
See All 10 Comments
ChaoticMissAdventures @marleed oh my goodness! It is scary how these diseases many of us have never thought about are making such strong comebacks. I know the military still gives smallpox shots and I kind of want one now.... 3mo
marleed @ChaoticMissAdventures I just had the measles vaccine re-administered because I was born inside the 9 years where the vaccine might not have a lifelong effect. I guess a blood test could show my immunities but both doctor and pharmacist advised to simply get the vaccine. I just didn‘t want to be responsible for continuing the spread as it climbs further up I35. 3mo
ChaoticMissAdventures @marleed I had my blood drawn during the last trump time because I wanted to be sure I had everything. I had asked my doctor to just give me everything again ... they said no ha! But another dose doesn't hurt you so I think everyone who is in that 9 years should get another. I am not yet 50 and I have been fighting with my doctor for the last 6 months to get the shingles vaccine early. I don't want it and don't want to spread it if I do get it! 3mo
marleed @ChaoticMissAdventures oh my gosh, I was in the same situation with the shingles vaccine. I watched my tough as nails dad, ignore he was ever ill, go down with shingles. Some of the nerve damage never went away. I was so glad when I finally qualified for that shot! (edited) 3mo
BethM This is so intriguing to me bc my sister actually got TB in high school. @ChaoticMissAdventures I had my records checked then too. I am not fully vaccinated for polio but they don‘t know why to do about it bc adults don‘t get the vaccine 😂 2mo
marleed @BethM I would be so scared to be diagnosed with TB but at least I now know that when discovered early it can be fully treated. (Well, unless RFK jr actions pull back TB research and medications). Were you required to take medications when your sister had TB? 2mo
BethM No, we actually found out when she took a test for work, she had almost no active symptoms. If memory serves she had like a 6 month course of antibiotics, and other than being scary, she thankfully didn‘t really get sick. 2mo
86 likes5 stack adds10 comments
blurb
Rachel.Rencher
post image

The conversation with John Green and Kaveh Akbar last night was wonderful. I especially appreciated the times when they discussed current events and their impact on John's research. He described medical research like a staircase. We just fell down the stairs in terms of progress on eradicating Tuberculosis, but we pick ourselves up and climb again. We're not at the end of history despite how it may feel. We're in the middle.

ChaoticMissAdventures Oh I am jealous, two amazing guys, what a delightful time! 3mo
63 likes1 comment
review
shanaqui
Pickpick

There! That was fun. Definitely one I'll recommend in future. I think at times it did focus on an individual TB patient to an extent that some might find bothersome (and verging into inspiration porn, right after discussing how that was a weird cultural thing that wasn't great), but I think it does also serve as a good illustration of some of Green's points. The science was accurate.

Loved that, like me, Green is fascinated by TB, and has OCD.

shanaqui I don't think Green has quite the same quality of fascination with tuberculosis; I think his fascination is more tinged by horror, while I'm fascinated with it as an organism and take a certain joy in understanding how it works and learning more about how it works.

But he's still pretty fascinated, and that was fun to spend time with.

2/3
3mo
shanaqui NB: For those reading this without context, I'm an MSc infectious diseases student at LSHTM. I wrote my BSc dissertation on drug-resistant TB, and the tuberculosis module is one of my electives. I'm not being a ghoul or something, just a biologist who has turned intense anxiety about diseases into utter fascination. TB is terrible when it harms someone, no question.

3/3
3mo
12 likes1 stack add2 comments
quote
shanaqui

“We cannot address TB only with vaccines and medications We cannot address it only with comprehensive STP programs. We must also address the root cause of tuberculosis, which is injustice. In a world where everyone can eat, and access healthcare, and be treated humanely, tuberculosis has no chance. Ultimately, we are the cause.

We must also be the cure.“

☝️☝️☝️☝️☝️☝️☝️

lil1inblue 👏 👏 👏 👏 👏 👏 👏 👏 👏 👏 3mo
12 likes1 comment
blurb
shanaqui

I'm with Green on a lot of this; he's clearly done his research. Currently up to his chapter criticising DOTS (directly observed therapy short-course) and YES, though I think he's conflating DOTS and DOT wrongly (DOTS was a global strategy to use directly observed therapy, which has long been superseded; DOT is still used as part of wider efforts). Don't agree with him that streptomycin caused the decline in TB infections/mortality though.

quote
shanaqui

“We know how to live in a world without tuberculosis. But we choose not to live in that world.“

Yep. Entirely true. We could drastically reduce the burden of tuberculosis in much less than a decade, if we were willing (even I can tell you how, and I'm just an MSc student who has specialised mildly into TB). We won't do it. That's a choice we've made. A choice we keep making. We're all culpable for this deliberate murder.

Clare-Dragonfly Well, that‘s distressing. 😟 3mo
shanaqui @Clare-Dragonfly Not an easy thing to sit with, for sure. Especially given the UK just cut foreign aid following the lead of the US. 3mo
lil1inblue I feel like this is true with several diseases. 😓 3mo
shanaqui @lil1inblue Sadly, yes. E.g. it's pretty true about AIDs at this point. 3mo
12 likes4 comments
blurb
shanaqui
post image

I genuinely got too excited thinking about this last night and couldn't fall asleep, so that is why, Your Honour, I did not get the seven+ hours of sleep my doctor has very firmly told me I should get...

And now it has arrived and I'm off work and can start reading it (and potentially arguing with it). Can you tell I have a Special Interest (TM)?

(I wrote my undergraduate dissertation on drug resistant TB and am now studying it during my MSc.)

marleed Oh I can‘t wait to read what you have to say. I just started this but I am medical knowledge challenged and know nothing of TB - except it‘s acronym 🤣 3mo
15 likes1 stack add1 comment
blurb
nitalibrarian
post image

My copy of Everything is Tuberculosis is here! I ordered the signed edition.

blurb
Rachel.Rencher
post image

Book n' breakfast in bed: snow day edition ❄️ Who knew reading about disease could be so interesting? I found myself saying to Lucas over and over, "Did you know Tuberculosis..."

65 likes1 stack add
blurb
Rachel.Rencher
post image

I have a snow day tomorrow! It's sunny and 75, but something called a bomb cyclone (??) is moving in tomorrow and we could get up to 10 inches of snow. Wild. But, that means I get to read John Green's new book before I see him this weekend!!

TheBookHippie Enjoy!!!! We get those here it‘s wild!!! 3mo
kspenmoll So happy you can have a day to read- let us know what you think@of his book! 3mo
thegirlwiththelibrarybag Ahh! I‘m so excited for you! Have the best time seeing John Green! 3mo
68 likes1 stack add3 comments
review
MaggieCarr
post image
Pickpick

A perfect narrative history and resource for a then and now world from an author who lives and breathes all he has learned about Tuberculosis and is doing something about it! Well done and worth the read!

Expected publication March 18, 2025

33 likes4 stack adds
review
Zbayardo
Pickpick

I love John Green's Non-Fiction more than his Fiction. I learn so much while being thoroughly entertained!

Green, a passionate advocate for global healthcare reform, shares the poignant story of his friendship with Henry, a young tuberculosis patient from Sierra Leone. The book blends personal anecdotes with a powerful history of tuberculosis, revealing how social and healthcare inequities contribute to its devastating global impact.

blurb
thegirlwiththelibrarybag
post image

I‘ve never been this excited to read a work of NF before! But I really enjoyed the Anthropocene Reviewed and I still watch the occasional Vlog Brothers video - so I‘m acquainted with John‘s musings on all things TB. It‘s unreasonable to wish for an international book tour… and yet I saw this on IG and felt a bit envious!

50 likes1 stack add