Editors Reads
guide 4 min read

Where to Start with Rebecca Skloot: A Reading Guide

Where to start with Rebecca Skloot — how to approach The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, her essential work of science and human story. A complete reading guide.

By Elena Marsh

Rebecca Skloot (born 1972) is an American science journalist who spent over a decade researching and reporting The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks (2010) — a book that took her from the Johns Hopkins archives to the Lacks family’s home in Baltimore, from cell biology laboratories to the history of medical consent law. The book became one of the bestselling science titles of the decade, winning multiple awards, and is now widely taught in university courses on bioethics, medical history, and science journalism.


Where to Start: The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks (2010)

The essential Skloot — and one of the essential nonfiction books of the century. In January 1951, Henrietta Lacks was admitted to Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore with an aggressive cervical cancer. During her treatment, a sample of her cancer cells was taken without her knowledge or consent — standard medical practice at the time — and sent to a researcher named George Gey who had been attempting for years to grow human cells in culture.

Henrietta’s cells did something no other cells had done: they did not die. They reproduced continuously, indefinitely, outside the human body. They became the first immortal human cell line in history — HeLa cells, named for their source — and were subsequently used to develop the polio vaccine, to test the effects of nuclear radiation, to develop cancer treatments, to advance the fundamental understanding of cellular biology, to generate billions of dollars in research and pharmaceutical development. They have been sent into space. They are in every biology laboratory on earth.

Henrietta Lacks died in October 1951 at thirty-one. Her family did not know that her cells had been taken. They did not know that her cells were being used in research, that they were being sold by biological supply companies, that they had become the foundation of an industry. They found out in the 1970s, by accident, when researchers contacted them wanting blood samples. When Skloot found the family in the 1990s to begin her research, Deborah Lacks — Henrietta’s youngest daughter — was still trying to understand what her mother’s cells were, why the family had received nothing, and what it meant that her mother was both dead and somehow immortal.

The book’s structural achievement is holding the science and the human story in equal tension. Skloot does not simplify the cell biology; she makes it genuinely accessible through Deborah’s eyes, as someone who has to learn what a cell is before she can understand what has been done. And she does not reduce Henrietta to a medical case; The Immortal Life is insistent that Henrietta was a full person — mother, wife, dancer, someone who wore red nail polish to her own hospitalisation — whose humanity was irrelevant to the researchers who used her cells and should not be irrelevant to us.

The ethical questions the book raises — Who owns biological material once it leaves a body? What consent is required? What is owed to people whose tissue produced commercial and scientific value? — were not settled in 1951, were contested at the time of publication, and remain unresolved. Skloot does not argue for a particular legal resolution. She gives you the questions in sufficient specificity to engage with them seriously.


Reading Rebecca Skloot

The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks is Skloot’s essential work. It stands alone and requires no prior reading.


For the full Rebecca Skloot bibliography, reviews, and biography, visit the Rebecca Skloot author page on Editors Reads.


Affiliate disclosure: Links to Amazon on this page are affiliate links. We earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where should I start with Rebecca Skloot?

The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks (2010) is Skloot's essential book — a decade of investigative journalism synthesised into one of the most important nonfiction works of the century. The story of a Black woman whose cancer cells were taken without consent in 1951 and became the most important biological materials in modern medical history, while her family lived in poverty and ignorance of what had been done.

What is The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks about?

In 1951, Henrietta Lacks's cancer cells were taken without consent during treatment at Johns Hopkins. Those cells — HeLa cells — became the first immortal human cell line in history: used to develop the polio vaccine, to test radiation, to advance cancer research, generating billions in pharmaceutical development. Skloot traces the science, Henrietta's life, and the Lacks family's discovery decades later that their mother's cells had achieved a kind of immortality while the family itself received nothing.

Is The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks a science book or a biography?

The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks works simultaneously as investigative journalism, biography, science writing, and social history. Skloot spent over a decade on the book, earned the trust of Henrietta's daughter Deborah, made the science of cell biology genuinely accessible, and embedded the ethical questions about medical consent, race, and ownership in specific human stories. The dual narrative — Henrietta's story and Deborah's story — is what lifts the book beyond any single category.

What should I read after The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks?

After The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks, Atul Gawande's Being Mortal covers the medical system's relationship to patients and mortality with comparable ethical seriousness. Bryan Stevenson's Just Mercy addresses the same intersection of race, American institutions, and justice from a legal perspective. Siddhartha Mukherjee's The Emperor of All Maladies covers the history of cancer research — the science that HeLa cells helped to build.

Affiliate Disclosure: As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. This article contains affiliate links — if you purchase through them we earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. Our editorial recommendations are independent of affiliate arrangements.

Books in This Article

Get Weekly Book Picks

Join 12,000+ readers who get hand-picked book recommendations every Sunday. No spam, unsubscribe any time.

Includes our exclusive Amazon deals digest. Affiliate links may be included.

More Reading Lists

Skip to main content