It’s a good time to learn the immune system—and this is the book for it
If ever there was a moment to brush up on your knowledge of the immune system, this is that moment. (OK, March-April 2020 may have been preferable, but you can still catch up.) And Immune: A Journey into the Mysterious System That Keeps You Alive is the perfect vehicle to help you do that. This book is phenomenal. It is engaging, it is informative, it is extremely clear and well-organized, it is helpful and illuminating and relevant and eye-opening and incredibly timely. And it is beautiful. Go get it and read it.
With enthusiasmPhilipp Dettmer is not an immunologist. He is a self-described immune system enthusiast." But his is no dilettantish, idle intellectual curiosity. He comes by his enthusiasm honestly, as he has had more intimate run-ins with his own immune system than anyone would like. As an adult, he developed a food allergy that sent him to the hospital with shock, and he had to undergo chemotherapy when he got cancer at age 32.
What Dettmer is, though, is an information designer. He founded Kurzgesagt-In a Nutshell, one of the largest science channels on YouTube, which exists to explain complex ideas in an accessible, holistic manner. But the immune system is incredibly, ridiculously, notoriously complex. So much so that even Dettmer, who has dedicated his career to making obtuse scientific information accessible, decided that the best way to introduce immunity was in book form rather than through his online videos. And an introduction is all the book is, as he tells you repeatedly; it's just a cursory overview of the whole intensely complicated affair. Immune is littered with disclaimers like this one:
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