Chances are, if youâve ever studied biology, youâve heard of HeLa cells. If you havenât, well… let me enlighten you a little! HeLa cells are known as an âimmortalâ cell line because they grow indefinitely and can be divided up and frozen for decades at a time amongst scientists for study. So basically, if you feed them? They will grow.
Pretty amazing, right? The thing is, while a lot of people have heard of HeLa cells and tons of scientists have utilized them (Jonas Salk, for one), very little was known about their origins for a very long time. Basically, we knew the cells came from the cervix of an African American woman during the â50s, but text books had the âdonorâ listed with a variety of names from Henrietta Lacks to Helen Lane to Helen Larson, all with a variety of ages.
The fact of the matter is that the real woman whose cervical cells were harvested was, in fact, Henrietta Lacks. Rebecca Sklootâs book The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks finally gives her and her family a voice. A history.
Hereâs a great excerpt from the book, one illustrating the importance of Henrietta Lacks and her fantastical cells that I probably didn’t do enough justice in my quickie explanation earlier: âScientists had been trying to keep human cells alive in culture for decades, but they all eventually died. Henriettaâs were different: they reproduced an entire generation every twenty-four hours, and they never stopped. They became the first immortal human cells ever grown in a laboratory.â Yeah. Pretty important stuff. In fact, the importance of these cells canât be overstated in any way shape or form. Theyâve been used to treat and cure hundreds of diseases and cancers, so why is that the children of Henrietta Lacks couldnât even afford health care? Why is that theyâve never seen a penny or a thank you note?
The author intended to find out why. Rebecca Skloot has poured years of her life and herself into this book, which is completely evident. The story reads like fiction, even the technical parts are spelled out in an interesting way, and we see how Skloot came to be part of the Lacks familyâs story and their fight to understand what happened to their mother and her cells.
There are spiritual and ethical questions raised throughout this book and some of the events surrounding the Lacks family are truly harrowing. One part that really stuck with me was learning that by the time the Lacks children finally learned that their motherâs cells were still alive, some twenty years after they were harvested, HeLa had already been to outer space and helped to test the vaccine for polio.
Sklootâs book is a masterpiece, plain and simple. Whether or not cellular biology interests you (I donât regularly pick up books about it for fun, amazingly), this book tells a story that will tug at the heartstrings and poke everybodyâs morality bone. Sure, harvesting cells without the consent of the donor is unethical but 1951 was a very different time and a very different place for an African American woman. Perhaps Deborah Lacks, Henriettaâs daughter, puts the paradox best. She said, âTruth be told, I canât get mad at science, because it help people live, and Iâd be a mess without it…[sic]â Which is a good point, of course, helping people is always good. But then she goes on to make an even better point, illustrating said paradox perfectly: “But I won’t lie, I would like to get some health insurance so that I don’t got to pay all that money every month for drugs my mother cells probably helped make.[sic]”
Though controversial, thereâs no denying how much Henrietta Lacks has contributed to humanity and no counting the amount of lives that her cells have saved. There wouldnât be enough âTHANK YOU!â hugs in the world to express it. If youâre interested and want to learn more, read this book. You will not be disappointed.
As always, thank you for reading and feel free to leave me your questions, comments and words of wisdom RIGHT HERE! Or on twitter! OR email me!
Images: Broadway Books
snore
Oooh, I so want to read this. There was a piece on HeLa cells, and Skloot’s boot, on NPR’s Radiolab, and it was FASCINATING AND HEARTBREAKING OMG. Off to my local library!
Wow. I have to get this book. What an amazing and unique story. Thanks for the great review. I just finished another really good and thought provoking read called, “Sun of god,” by Gregory Sams, which is about whether we should worship the Sun or regard it as a god. It’s worth checking out if you would like to know more about our place in the universe.
Great post for a great book!
There was a great piece on Henrietta Lacks ( the He La in those immortal cells) awhile back on PBS. It is an amazing story. Finally this woman who died so young and whose cells were harvested and continue to be used is receiving the praise she deserves. I completely agree with you Rebecca Skloot’s book is a great read. She is a detailed yet compassionate writer. BTW Henrietta Lacks who had been buried in an unmarked grave, finally got a headstone this past May. Here’s the link in case your interested.
http://scienceblogs.com/culturedish/2010/05/a_historic_day_henrietta_lacks.php
Thanks for the heads up on this. Normally I read fiction, but this sounds like a really interesting read. I’m already first in line with my hold on it at the library!
I am currently majoring in Bio/ Bio med. sciences, so this is very interesting. Thanks for bringing this book to my attention.
Neat! This is definitely going on my to-read list.
I saw this book on the shelf at B&N and nearly picked it up. Biology isn’t one of my favorite reading subjects, but the story seemed compelling enough. Thank you for your review! I’ll probably pick this one up the next time I’m in the bookstore.