Henrietta Lacks The Untold Story
Henrietta Lacks The Untold Story book cover

Henrietta Lacks The Untold Story

Paperback – September 1, 2020

Price
$19.39
Format
Paperback
Pages
156
Publisher
BookBaby
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1098307424
Dimensions
6 x 0.4 x 9 inches
Weight
9 ounces

Description

Henrietta Lacks was an African American woman whose cells were the first human cells to grow in cultures known as HeLa cells. Before the discovery of HeLa, scientists were challenged in their research due to the difficulty of keeping cells alive outside of the human body. HeLa cells forever changed the medical landscape. They were used to test the first polio vaccine, which protected millions of people around the world. This is a memoir written by Henrietta Lacks' grandson Ron Lacks. Ron Lacks, tells a behind the scenes story of what happened in the past 9 years to his family in his new book "Henrietta Lacks The Untold Story". Ron Lacks is the oldest grandson of Henrietta Lacks. He takes you on the inside of a story that has haunted him for the past 9 years! This memoir will answer your questions as to how the family is really doing now. From Clover to Baltimore… giving you an inside look at what happened behind closed doors that ultimately divided a once strong family. "It's not often that African Americans get to share in the telling of our own stories, most of the time the people are long gone and we can only go by what people decide to say happened and not the actual truth of what happened".

Features & Highlights

  • Henrietta Lacks The Untold StoryI really need people to understand the reason behind me writing this book about my grandmother "Henrietta Lacks". For those that have never heard of her, she is the first human whose cell line was able to grow in culture, her cells were unlike any other cells, while others cells would die, Henrietta Lacks cells doubled every 20 to 24 hours. She has contributed to the medical field in ways that no other cell line has done. HeLa cells has helped with the polio vaccine, gene mapping, in vitro fertilization, sensitivity to tape, dental and even used in the cosmetic field. To hear and read constantly that Henrietta Lacks was a poor black farmer is hard to accept. Anyone that looks at her picture can tell that Henrietta and her husband David Lacks weren't poor black farmers - they enjoyed the finer things in life. They moved from Clover to Baltimore, not out of poverty but, because they felt their children would get a better education here. I decided it was time to let people have an inside look from the side of the family that people don't hear about much and that's Lawrence Lacks family - Henrietta Lacks' oldest son. He's the only one who's still alive that knew his mother. My dad was 16 years old when his mom passed away. It still brings tears to his eyes when he thinks about all the pain and suffering that she went through before her passing. Our family has always wanted people to know about Henrietta Lacks, because we have always been enthused by the millions of lives that "Henrietta Lacks' HeLa cells" have done to help save and cure people all over the world. But what we didn't want is for her history to be told incorrectly. I'm so thankful that I am able to tell her family side of the story from the people who was there while she was still living and things that I personally witnessed for myself as time went on. As I get older I now realize if I didn't tell this story no one else would. This is a story that needs to be shared because there is a huge part of her history that has been left out. As stated in my book : "It's not often that we as African Americans get to share in the telling of our own stories, most of the time the people are long gone and we can only go by what people decide to say happened and not the actual truth of what happened".

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(175)
★★★★
25%
(73)
★★★
15%
(44)
★★
7%
(20)
-7%
(-21)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Perpetual reproducing cells of a Black woman leads to cures and polio vaccine

Excellent American Black History. Well written by white author who has interwoven the gift of a black women’s cervical cancer cells to medical research since 1951, including the development of the polio vaccine. She nor her family benefit from her contribution to medicine while medical organizations continue to profit from her perpetual reproducing cells today. Another revelation of systematic racism in medicine in the United States. I was motivated to purchase the Book after watch a film produced and stared in by Oprah.
10 people found this helpful
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ABSOLUTE MUST READ!

Bought the book by Rebecca Skloot and saw this book by Ron Lacks. I wanted to get both perspectives (one written by a "journalist" and one by a close family member). I was not disappointed. The facts and perspective that Mr. Lacks conveys in his book are absolutely priceless. If you have read or are planning to read Ms. Skloot's book you ABSOLUTELY MUST READ this book afterwards! If Ms. Skloot's book is a selection for your book club, your book club ABSOLUTELY MUST READ this book afterwards! (Have I made my point yet?) I am so happy that this book was second on the page when I looked up Ms. Skloot's book and that I bought them together. Mr. Lacks has done a great service to his Grandmother by writing this book and giving her back the dignity and grace that Ms. Skloot took away.
6 people found this helpful
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A courageous book

I found this book very interesting, and helpful. It helped me "round out" a portrait of Henrietta Lacks, the author's grandmother, and gave me a sense of the Lacks family more generally--not just Henrietta. Mr. Lacks fondly recalls, for example, family trips in the summer to Clover, Virginia, where so many of his relatives lived that an area of the town was known as "Lacksville." The book includes quite a number of engaging family pictures, too. I appreciated the author's honesty in registering his anger toward Rebecca Skloot and her book, "The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks"--a book which for him was a theft and a distortion of his grandmother's story, and from which the Lacks family received no compensation, he maintains. He also honestly registers the painful division of Lacks family members as a result of the extraordinary attention from Skloot's book and Oprah Winfrey's movie--after having had to live through the humiliation and anger of discovering how Henrietta's cells--now known, worldwide as HeLa cells--had been taken from her body while she was being treated at Johns Hopkins for cervical cancer. Taken after an extremely slow and painful dying.
It must have taken a lot of courage for Mr. Lacks to write this book, and I am grateful to him. Please give his book a read!
3 people found this helpful
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Thank you for writing this book

I read the book written by author mentioned in his book & honestly became so interested I'm absolutely ashamed to think I took what she wrote to heart. I had ordered the movie same time I ordered this book after reading this book I cancelled the movie. I'm so glad he wrote this it truly shows what his family & grandmother has endured & continues to endure. We owe his grandmother so much for all she has & will continue to contribute to medical fields. I'm sure his grandmother would be so upset at the split in the family she so loved & yet proud of someone speaking truth & for all she has helped contribute to our every day life without us even knowing. I read it in 3 hours time absolute page turner.
3 people found this helpful
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The Real Henrietta Lacks Story

Great book written by an actual family member of the Lacks
1 people found this helpful
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Personal

The book was truly touching from the author's view of his mum and maintaining his family pride. Actually bought the another book from the other author who wrote about his mum just to compare what he stated in this book.
1 people found this helpful
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Written from her family's point of view.

After watching the movie on HBO, but then reading the family's point of view, I can see how they've felt taken advantage of.
1 people found this helpful
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A MUST READ!

I'm just so honored to have connected with Mr. Lacks. A true genuine and amazing human being indeed! He took the time and love to send me a signed copy himself 💝
1 people found this helpful
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Interesting

I love learning about cultures and things you can’t get out of a school textbook. Interesting read!
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the untols story

Love this book and the knowledge it presented !!!!!!!!!