Vidya Krishnan is an award-winning journalist who has been reporting on medical science for the last 20 years. She has written for the Atlantic, the LA Times, The Hindu (as their health and science editor) and for the British Medical Journal.
Phantom Plague is a fascinating tale of humankind's determined struggle against one of its most dreaded illnesses - overcoming science denialism, medical apartheid, and other prejudices. --Scroll.in At its best, Krishnan's writing is clear and compelling, and the book is a worthy read for anyone interested in public health and infectious diseases. --New York Times Book Review At a time when the world is paralyzed by a virus that mutates and resists modern medical interventions, Vidya Krishnan's sobering account of the return of tuberculosis is timely. As she notes, the world is vastly different from lab conditions, and distinctions of wealth, race, class, caste, and inequities and imbalances of power and accountability clash, delaying interventions, denying access, and destroying lives. With lucidity and passion, wisdom and compassion, expertise and curiosity, she demystifies the science, revealing how human frailties and arrogance are letting the disease prevail. That the sickness is not physical, but goes beyond that, suggests how difficult the path ahead is going to be. --Salil Tripathi, author of Offence: The Hindu Case In Phantom Plague, journalist Vidya Krishnan has written an engaging and informative account of the history of TB and other infectious diseases and their impact on humanity. Anyone with an interest in how microbes and politics contribute to inequality and sickness should read this book. --Johnjoe McFadden, professor of molecular genetics, University of Surrey Shot through with tragic and inspiring stories of patients and doctors who have battled against the disease, this is a bracing look at what might be the next public health catastrophe. --Publishers Weekly A penetrating social history of a virulent disease... A timely, significant analysis of the dire consequences of public health failures. --Kirkus, Starred review