
New Books Network Jonathan Gleason, "Field Guide to Falling Ill" (Yale UP, 2026)
Jan 27, 2026
Jonathan Gleason, writer, instructor, and medical interpreter, discusses his debut essay collection Field Guide to Falling Ill. He traces personal crises, archival research, and drug histories. Conversations explore medical interpreting, HIV medication stories, opioid landscapes, and how a field-guide frame reveals the history and human costs of American healthcare.
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Medicine As A Mapped Landscape
- Jonathan Gleason frames a "field guide" to map medicine's interaction with politics, culture, and history rather than nature.
- The form lets readers navigate medical institutions as an extensible landscape shaped by broader forces.
From Medical Training To Medical Writing
- Gleason intended to be a doctor but pivoted after seeing questions about medicine's social context emerge in his life.
- Personal events like his mother's heart attack and lifeguard experiences braided into essays about fear, access, and intimacy.
Archive Hunt That Turned Into Tapes
- Research on Joseph Sonnabend stalled in archives until finding Michael Callen's recorded tapes unlocked the story.
- Those hours of phone recordings revealed the relationship and theories that animate the essay A Difficult Man.







