Yo I can't reply on the post. Yes, it's a great book. I did a double take when he turned up on this podcast will kill you. I had never read a John Green book before but I have been on Tumblr long enough to know who he is lol. If you don't know the podcast yet, I also recommend it. They cover all sorts of diseases and always look at how history/society was shaped by it or how exploitative social systems support transmission.
(You can reply if you go to the original post on my blog. You probably have replies turned off, so it's just "turning replies off" on your own blog, but as long as the OP doesn't have replies off - and I don't - you can still reply on their original post.)
I'll check out his episode of that podcast! I'm not usually a podcast person, but I've really enjoyed all the interviews he's been doing around this book, and his own podcast The Anthropocene Reviewed was one of my favorites when it was running. I've long been a John Green fan through Vlogbrothers, but his YA books had never interested me (have read TFIOS and he's a strong writer, but in YA form it just felt like, "this book would have blown my mind if I'd read it as a preteen but now as an adult I'm a little too old for it"), so I've been really happy for his pivot to writing nonfiction for adults. Everything is Tuberculosis is so thorough and well-researched and also emotional and heartfelt in how it tells Henry's story, and so I really wish I could just force everyone to read it, particularly people who need their head screwed on a little straighter with regard to their feelings about foreign aid and public health policy.











