NBN Book of the Day

Jonathan Gleason, "Field Guide to Falling Ill" (Yale UP, 2026)

Jan 27, 2026
Jonathan Gleason, writer, instructor, and medical interpreter, explores medicine, illness, and queer experience in America. He traces personal and historical threads from a blood clot and HIV prevention to AZT, PrEP, and opioid crises. He discusses interpreting in clinics, archival discoveries, and why a lyrical essay collection can make healthcare feel less isolating.
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INSIGHT

Medicine As A Historical Landscape

  • Jonathan Gleason frames medicine as a landscape shaped by history, politics, and culture rather than a purely clinical field.
  • Understanding that context helps patients see institutions as changeable rather than immutable.
ANECDOTE

Blood Clot Sparked The Book's Core

  • Gleason's blood clot and emergency rib surgery anchored the book's titular essay and clarified the collection's themes.
  • The personal crisis helped him see repeated threads across disparate essays about fear, institutions, and recovery.
ANECDOTE

Archives Led To Hidden Audio Gold

  • While researching Joseph Sonnabend at the New York Public Library, Gleason hit a dead end in the archive and pivoted to Michael Callen's recordings.
  • The recorded phone conversations revealed their evolving friendship and theories, bringing the essay to life.
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