1. The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks
Rebecca Skloot · 2010
In 1951, doctors took cells from a poor Black woman's cervix without asking -- those cells never died, built modern medicine, and her family didn't find out for twenty years.
The book directly contributed to public pressure that led to real policy discussion around informed consent for tissue research, and to a later settlement between the Lacks family and a company profiting off HeLa-derived products. That’s a rare case of a book actually changing the situation it documents, not just describing it.
Read it if: you want the full, human story behind the HeLa cells used in nearly every major medical breakthrough since 1951, and the racial and ethical exploitation baked into how they were obtained
Skip it if: you're looking for a clean science book about cell biology -- this is a journalist's decade-long investigation into a family and a medical-ethics scandal, with the science as backdrop, not the main event




