Showing posts with label Poverty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Poverty. Show all posts

Monday, April 27, 2026

Everything is Tuberculosis by John Green

Of the nonfiction titles that we considered for our book clubEverything is Tuberculosis sounded the most intriguing and it was written by a well-known author, who also happens to be one of my favorites. This is an interesting and, at time, a somewhat infuriating discussion of the deadliest disease to affect humankind. 

Although Green is most notable for his young adult award winning books, he has become an advocate of global health initiatives. In August of 2019 as a member of the Partners in Health. He traveled to Sierra Leone wher he met Henry Reider, a teenager, who has battled tuberculosis  through peaks and valleys of treatment. It is through Henry that Green relates the importance of fighting this disease. 

The title refers to how health and disease are implicated in so much of our culture. He ties Pasadena, California, Stetson hats, Adirondack chairs, and the start of World War I to the disease. Henry's story began when he was six and showed signs of weakness, experienced weight loss and night sweats- all signs that pointed to tuberculosis. But the initial tests came back negative and accordingly, he wasn't treated. This happens so much of the time and is a reason that the disease spreads so virulently, even though it is a bacteria. Once the diagnosis was made, the treatment was started, the regimen is brutal, especially in a very poor, country. The mixture of drugs need to be taken on a very regulated schedule and on a full stomach. With so many in 3rd world countries not having sufficient food, the drugs are ineffective. 

Green includes many statistics to show how tuberculosis is spread, goes undetected, and is prone to drug resistance. After years of treatment, when nearly on his death bed, Henry got lucky and has survived and is now an advocate for treatment of the disease with his own YouTube channel. 

The message that Green impresses on the reader is that the challenge of global health is "the cure is where the disease is not, and the disease is where the cure is not.” If tuberculosis affected the rich, a detection and a cure would be on the horizon. Pharmaceutical companies have inflated the cost of medication, to make it nearly impossible for those in poverty areas to afford it. The World Health Organization has been involved in securing money for some of those areas, but it is not enough. USAID also worked on providing medication, but that aid was pulled when the agency was terminated. Green calls the world to action in eliminating not only the disease but the stigma of it.

An excellent and thought-provoking read.


Wednesday, December 10, 2025

Paper Girl by Beth Macy

 Paper Girl is a reflection on life in a small town and the current state of affairs of the United States by journalist and Congressional hopeful Beth Macy. She relates life growing up in a small town to poverty stricken parents, her father called the town drunk in Urbana, Ohio. She weaves this growing up into comments about the political divide that has darkened the history of the United States. 

In recounting her formative years she draws comparisons and contrasts to the works of JD Vance's Hillbilly Elegy  and Barbara Kingsolver's Demon Copperfield. She has no issue in presenting herself as a liberally minded democrat as she revisits some of her hometown acquaintances and relative who do not share her views or ideals. She is thankful for being able to attend college because of Pell grants, that have been so diminished at the present. She relates this to a recent graduate of Urbana High School, Silas James, a trans, is trying to go to college, get his welding certificate and provide care for his siblings after their father's death. Silas is woven in this memoir and it creates a moving thread with how unforgiving the attitude of so many are in this day of nonacceptance.  

She advocates kindness, forgiveness, and grace as she witnesses the results of the 2024 election. As a journalist she is a truth teller who is an acute observer and listener. As such she regrets that true journalism is floundering today with so few getting information from factual sources and relying on social media for their information.

 The book was a real eye-opener into the life of rural poverty and a meaningful read. I marked many statements as I was reading. Beth Macy spoke on 8 December 2025 for the Pittsburgh Arts and Lectures series. She was impassioned and hopeful that our citizenry will find their way in the near future. She has announced her candidacy for Representative for the 6th District of Virginia. May she win!


Pittsburgh Arts and Lectures
My copy of Paper Girl  signed