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Blink 3 of 8 - The 5 AM Club
by Robin Sharma
The History and Persistence of Our Deadliest Infection
Everything Is Tuberculosis by John Green explores the intersection of disease, society, and identity. Green examines the historical and contemporary impact of tuberculosis, highlighting personal stories that reveal broader social and scientific truths.
The stories we tell about illness can be just as powerful as the illness itself. When a society frames a disease as a mark of creative genius or moral failure, that framing profoundly shapes who suffers and who receives compassion. This is the story of one disease with two deeply different identities, and a history that shows how our ideas about illness become matters of life and death.
In the 18th and 19th centuries, Europe was haunted by a plague known as consumption, what we now call tuberculosis. Though it was the leading cause of death, it carried an extraordinary romanticism that’s difficult to imagine today. The disease marked the sensitive and brilliant, a “flattering malady” that refined the body and elevated the soul. Its physical symptoms became beauty standards. Pale skin, rosy cheeks from fever, wide luminous eyes – these signs of consumptive patients were celebrated as “consumptive chic.”
Women used cosmetics to mimic the look. Men like Lord Byron mused that dying of consumption would be desirable, because then women would say, “See that poor Byron – how interesting he looks in dying!” This romanticized illness was considered a “White Man’s Plague,” evidence of the so-called master race’s delicate and superior constitution.
Then in 1882, everything changed.
A German doctor named Robert Koch proved consumption was caused by a bacterium. The romantic narrative instantly collapsed, replaced by fear. The same disease, now clinically named tuberculosis, was completely rebranded. Gone was the flattering malady of the elite. In its place: a contagious illness of filth, poverty, and depravity.
This new story was immediately weaponized. The same white medical establishment that had claimed the disease as proof of superiority now used it as a tool of oppression. Doctors argued that high tuberculosis rates among Black Americans and Indigenous peoples stemmed from racial weaknesses rather than racism, poor housing, and malnutrition.
This lie had deadly consequences. In Canada, Indigenous children forced into residential schools died from TB at rates of 8,000 per 100,000 – almost unprecedented in human history – due to deliberate neglect and mistreatment. The story society told about tuberculosis had become a form of violence.
This legacy of stigma and neglect has a human face. You can find it today at Lakka Government Hospital in Sierra Leone, a former leprosy isolation facility where patients are housed in rooms resembling prison cells. There you might meet Henry Reider. He is seventeen, but years of tuberculosis and malnutrition have so stunted his growth that he looks like a small boy. He has the very physical traits a 19th-century European might have found beautiful – visible cheekbones, wide eyes.
But he is living no romantic poem. He is living the brutal, present-tense reality of tuberculosis, an illness that society decided long ago was a plague for the poor and forgotten. His story begins where the romantic myth ends: with a curable disease in a world that has chosen to leave him uncured.
Everything Is Tuberculosis (2025) reveals how humanity’s deadliest infection is not just a biological problem but a story of profound injustice. Through the unforgettable journey of a young Sierra Leonean man named Henry Reider, you’ll discover how the disease was shaped by prejudice, why a cure that has existed for decades is withheld by corporate greed, and what it takes to fight back. It’s an urgent call to understand that the true cause of tuberculosis is injustice, and therefore, the cure must be justice.
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Try Blinkist to get the key ideas from 7,500+ bestselling nonfiction titles and podcasts. Listen or read in just 15 minutes.
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Blink 3 of 8 - The 5 AM Club
by Robin Sharma