Daisy Hernández
Daisy Hernández is a former reporter for The New York Times and has been writing about the intersections of race, immigration, class, and sexuality for almost two decades. She has written for National Geographic, NPR’s All Things Considered and Code Switch, The Atlantic, Slate, and Guernica, and she’s the former editor of Colorlines, a newsmagazine on race and politics. Hernández is the author of the award-winning memoir A Cup of Water Under My Bed and co-editor of Colonize This! Young Women of Color on Today’s Feminism. She is an associate professor at Miami University in Ohio.
Praise
-
Lyrical, unflinching. . . . Hernández expertly skates the line between memoir and science tome, showing the personal effects of a disease perpetuated by a cascade of systemic failures.
—The Washington Post
-
A necessary read for anyone concerned about health crises across the world.
—The Boston Globe
-
Part memoir, part investigative thriller. . . . Her book shines a light on [a] neglected harm.
—The San Francisco Chronicle
-
A common but overlooked parasite killed the author’s aunt, spurring this exposé.
—The New York Times Book Review
-
Deftly reported. . . . a nuanced and empathetic look into the intersections of poverty, racism and the U.S. health?care system.
—TIME
-
Hernández raises damning questions about which infectious diseases get attention and whom we believe to be deserving of care.
—NPR Books
-
A trenchant work of investigative journalism. . . . weaving in cultural and political analysis, extensive research, and personal history as she chases down answers about her aunt’s tragic death from an underreported disease known as Chagas.
—Buzzfeed
-
Visceral. . . . [Hernández] weaves storytelling, science and policy with striking results.
—Newsweek
-
She movingly profiles individual patients and. . . . the divergent fates experienced by [illness] sufferers of differing incomes, origins, and ethnicities.
—The New Yorker
-
This vivid, multidimensional account brings an ongoing medical injustice to light.
—Publishers Weekly, Starred Review
-
Uncovers a story about the intersection of public health and discrimination, and a disease that will become even more virulent as climate change stretches the kissing bug habitat further north.
—Chicago Public Library
-
Raises questions on why a disease that kills tens of thousands a year is not more of a focus.
—NBC News
-
Compelling and impressive. . . . Hernández’s lucid writing provides a paradigm for how to begin addressing the inequities baked into medicine.
—Shelf Awareness
-
A deeply personal, unsparing analysis of how neglected diseases disproportionately affect marginalized peoples in the world’s richest country—and why they need not.
—Kirkus Reviews
-
Blending family and medical history, this account is especially relevant in an era of pandemics.
—Library Journal
-
A riveting investigation of a rare infectious disease, racial politics and for-profit healthcare.
—Book Public
-
Traces the effects of Chagas on minority communities, revealing how poverty, racism, and public policy have intersected to disrupt adequate healthcare interventions.
—ALTA
-
The book is propulsive, fascinating, and tragic in equal parts, and in both style and substance it reminds us that the cold hard facts of medical science are never separate from humanity, or from our prejudices, or from our most intimate stories.
—Undark Magazine
-
An expansive account of poverty, race, and who we consider worthy of help as it relates to location-based medical ailments.
—Bitch Magazine
-
Engaging and dynamic. . . . A reader walks away from The Kissing Bug with more knowledge and empathy than they had before and a sense that something must be done to save lives.
—Southern Review of Books
-
Powerful.
—The Lancet
-
Fascinating.
—Reading Women
-
This nuanced and timely take exposes a disease that silently harms hundreds of thousands, it also serves as a prescription for change in our public policies and health care system.
—Discover Magazine
-
Trace[s] some of the most pressing questions about race and the institutions that purport to save lives in the United States, all of it held together by Hernandez’s complicated love for her once-vibrant aunt.
—Jezebel
-
Through interviews with patients, doctors, and epidemiologists, Hernández weaves a narrative of the racial politics that overshadow modern healthcare.
—INSIDER
-
A lyrical hybrid of memoir and science reporting.
—LEAPS.ORG
-
Engrossing.
—Bookmarks
-
The engrossing account of a family medical mystery that led to a compassionate investigation of an underattended disease.
—Foreword Reviews
-
Hernández writes to the heart of the story with immense tenderness, compassion, and intelligence. A riveting read.
—Angie Cruz, author of Dominicana
-
With The Kissing Bug, Daisy Hernández takes her place alongside great science writers like Rebecca Skloot and Mary Roach, immersing herself in the deeply personal subject of a deadly insect-borne disease that haunted her own family. It’s a tender and compelling personal saga, an incisive work of investigative journalism, and an absolutely essential perspective on global migration, poverty, and pandemics.
—Amy Stewart, author of Wicked Bugs
-
The Kissing Bug is a deft mix of family archaeology, parasite detective story, and American reckoning. A much-needed addition to the canon.
—Danielle Ofri, MD, PhD, author of When We Do Harm: A Doctor Confronts Medical Error
-
An engaging, eye-opening read for anyone looking to learn more about the human suffering caused by the collision of a parasite and years of neglect by the United States’ medical system.
—Kris Newby, author of Bitten