Cover Image: Everything is True

Everything is True

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Member Reviews

A very moving and emotional book set in the pandemic. The author takes about how the pandemic affected health care workers and the lasting effect it has had.

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Rooper Farooki is a junior doctor & at the start of the Covid pandemic she lost her sister to cancer. This is the account of the first forty days of the lockdown in 2020. I found the style of writing quite off-putting It is a hard hitting often difficult read. I found I could only manage it in small doses. However it does bring home the horrors the author & her colleagues had/have to endure. Thanks to Netgalley & the publisher for letting me read & review this book. I can't say I enjoyed it, but I am glad I read it.

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Well that was bloody brutal, and raw, and harsh, and honest, and incredibly heartbreaking. I wish the the Prime Minister and his policy makers would read this. This is how we treated our 'NHS Heroes'. I dare anyone read this book and then tell me that a clap once a week was enough to show our appreciation of what medical professionals had to go through.
Anyway... I'll put my soap box away now and talk about the book. The writing style really dragged me into what was happening. No, it wasn't the most sophisticated, descriptive, great flowing writing but it was realistic and gripping. The author did a fantastic job of showing us what it felt like to work on the front line through the pandemic and it was horrific. Clinical work was finely woven with her personal life and the effects it was having on her and her family. It feels weird to say this was a great book because of the topic and the realities of it but it definitely did its job and was well written.

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An inspirational read! In early 2020, junior doctor Roopa Farooki lost her sister to cancer. But just weeks later, she found herself plunged into another kind of crisis, fighting on the frontline of the battle taking place in her hospital, and in hospitals across the country.

Everything is True is the story of Roopa’s first forty days of the Covid-19 crisis from the frontlines of A&E and the acute medical wards, as struggling through her grief, she battles for her patients’ and colleagues’ survival. Working thirteen-hour shifts, she returns home each evening to write through her exhaustion, chronicling the devastating losses and slowly eroding dehumanisation happening in real time on the ward.

At once an unflinching insider’s account of medicine in the time of coronavirus, and the devastating story of a sister’s grief, Everything is True is an exhilarating memoir of holding on to that which makes us human against insurmountable odds.

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Interesting diary style report of the lead up to and first 40days of lockdown. I’m not sure I really enjoyed the sound bite style stream of consciousness. Some interesting observations and author’s honesty about their ignorance to the oncoming virus, the reality versus media images and “they say you are risking your life…it doesn’t feel like that”.

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Just finished @RoopaFarooki's Everything Is True. It's a heartbreaking read about the struggle of a grieving junior doctor during the first 40 days of the pandemic. Beautiful, painful and appropriate. Didn't expect to, but held it together right up until the acknowledgements.

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A doctor's account of life on the front line during the first Coronavirus lockdown in the UK. Not only is the author dealing with caring for very sick patients - she is also grieving for her sister who died months beforehand. This account, written in diary form, really illustrates the tough choices and difficulties medics faced at the start of 2020 with issues such as PPE being highlighted as a particular problem. I found this a tough read, so it must have been extremely tough balancing such challenging circumstances with family life. Accounts such as this will be so important for recording this period in time and the author has done a great job of putting her honest thoughts and views to paper.

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I finished reading this book well over a week ago and it has taken me until now to process the information and raw emotion in order to attempt writing a review. As I am not at all certain that I can do justice to such an important book, I will start by saying that I urge you to read this book to gain some insight into the real impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on healthcare workers. It will open your eyes to the human story that the government and much of the mainstream media seem to gloss over in their slick presentation of statistics.


Before retraining in medicine, Dr Roopa Farooki has previously published fiction, for both adults and for a middle-grade readership, additionally she lectures on a post-graduate writing course at the University of Oxford. Her prowess as a writer blazes through this account of her experience as a Junior Doctor during the first forty days, “la quarantena”, of the pandemic lockdown in March 2020. Already grieving for the loss of her older sister to breast cancer, she is exposed to the rapidly escalating crisis of COVID-19 infected patients at a time when the scientific and medical community were desperately trying to assess the best way to deal with the new virus and frontline medical staff were asked to treat patients with little or no protective clothing. The absolute vulnerability of the healthcare workforce facing this new threat is laid out starkly, and although it angers her, the language of the battlefield is deployed to underline their sacrifice on the frontline.

The book is arresting in its structure. I think it is the first time that I’ve read a biographical account written in the second person. As a reader, you are forced into Dr Roopa’s shoes and experience the immediacy, viscerality and exhaustion of her journey through la quarentera. This focus on the first forty days of lockdown demonstrates how unprepared the powers at the top of our society were, and reminds us that we could and should have learnt from the experience of clinicians in Italy, who desperately tried to warn other countries what they were about to face. This lack of leadership in the very early stages accounts for the anger that comes later in the recount, in the light of so many lives both clinicians and patients, lost unnecessarily. The doctor certainly does not hold back on her scathing opinion of our Prime Minister.

As lockdown is enforced Dr Roopa begins walking to and from work and in the early days spots a fox, which she thinks is basking in the early spring sunshine. As realisation dawns that it is actually lying dead under the trees, she charts it’s gradual decomposition which symbolises her own slow deterioration under the onslaught of the pandemic. As the flow of patients with breathing difficulties into the hospital increases, frontline staff must treat them despite a total lack of PPE, or even basic scrubs. You can almost feel the bone-aching exhaustion of 13 hour shifts in which she is lucky to get a 5 minute break. Being skilled at tricky procedures such as accessing awkward veins means that Dr Roopa is often called in to take body fluids from COVID-positive patients, increasing her own risk still further.

It does not escape the doctor’s notice that there is a disparity in the COVID-19 mortality statistics between populations of different ethnicities. Amongst the names of those healthcare workers who died from the virus in the early stage of the pandemic she recognises that the majority are of BAME heritage and, as someone who was born in Pakistan, she conveys the desperation of knowing that becoming infected could be a death sentence. This is compounded by a less than sympathetic domestic experience, where she is treated like a leper who might bring disease into the family home. With so little support from those around her, mental conversations with her deceased sister become a means of rationalising the situation. Inevitably, Dr Roopa does fall ill with COVID-19; thankfully she recovers to return to the NHS frontline.

I am beyond admiration and gratitude to Dr Roopa Farooki for her dedication to her dual vocations as both doctor and writer. I hope that this searingly honest account will open the eyes of many to the sacrifices that are made by NHS staff to protect the health of the nation; standing up to their responsibilities in the face of indifference, ineptitude and disrespect from some of those in power who should be supporting them.

I am grateful to Bloomsbury and NetGalley for access to an electronic proof of Everything is True ahead of publication in return for an honest opinion.

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This book is EVERYTHING, I cannot imagine what medical staff and other keyworkers went through whilst the majority of us where safe at home, but this book goes a long way to explaining that. It was emotive and inspiring. I couldnt put it down. I took Roopa Farooki to my heart and I really felt like i was going through her grief. concerns and horror with her. I loved it and I loved her.

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It's the voice that grabs you: written in second person, prose as dense as poetry, there's an immediacy to this doctor's account of covid the first truly literary memoir of the pandemic. I could not put this down, blown away by Farooki's drive and honesty. I want everyone I know to read it.

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A really difficult book to review. This must have been so difficult to write, but more difficult to live through.
I can't begin to imagine what some have had to endure through this pandemic.
I was worried at first that I would be disappointed with the book, that I shouldn't really want to read about it all when the whole world has been suffering.
It's clear some have suffered far more than others.
My had goes off to all our medical staff, each and every profession that has had to struggle through these unprecedented times.
Well done to the author for writing a touching, moving book.

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