The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks meets Get Out in this
"startling...powerful" (Kirkus Reviews) investigation of racial
inequality at the core of the heart transplant race.
In 1968, Bruce Tucker, a black man, went into Virginia's top research
hospital with a head injury, only to have his heart taken out of his
body and put into the chest of a white businessman. Now, in The Organ
Thieves, Pulitzer Prize-nominated journalist Chip Jones exposes the
horrifying inequality surrounding Tucker's death and how he was used as
a human guinea pig without his family's permission or knowledge.
The circumstances surrounding his death reflect the long legacy of
mistreating African Americans that began more than a century before with
cadaver harvesting and worse. It culminated in efforts to win the heart
transplant race in the late 1960s. Featuring years of research and fresh
reporting, along with a foreword from social justice activist Ben
Jealous, "this powerful book weaves together a medical mystery, a legal
drama, and a sweeping history, its characters confronting unprecedented
issues of life and death under the shadows of centuries of racial
injustice" (Edward L. Ayers, author of The Promise of the New South).