Cancer Physician and Pulitzer Prize-Winning Author Siddhartha Mukherjee

I Play Scrabble Like a Maniac

Siddhartha Mukherjee is the author of The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer, winner of the 2011 Pulitzer Prize in general nonfiction, and The Gene: An Intimate History. He also is an assistant professor of medicine at Columbia University and a cancer physician and researcher. Before speaking at a Zócalo event about genes—“Will Genetic Engineering Endanger Humanity?”—he talked about chocolate for breakfast, Einstein’s hair, and Scrabble.

Q:

What did you have for breakfast today?


A:

Chocolate and coffee.


Q:

What superpower would you most like to have?


A:

The capacity to read other peoples minds.


Q:

What dessert do you find impossible to resist?


A:

Tiramisu or anything that has lemon in it.


Q:

Who was your childhood hero?


A:

I loved scientists like Einstein. Especially his hair.


Q:

What’s your favorite restaurant?


A:

Larsen’s, on Martha’s Vineyard. It’s a seafood shack where you sit on crates and eat oysters and lobsters.


Q:

What’s the hardest thing about being a doctor?


A:

Encountering the inner lives of patients and trying to help sort out what they feel is the best next step for them.


Q:

What’s the last habit you tried to kick?


A:

Biting my nails.


Q:

What social media site do you spend the most time on?


A:

I try to do no social media.


Q:

What’s the last board game you played?


A:

I play Scrabble like a maniac.


Q:

What does it take to get you on the dance floor?


A:

Pushing and pulling.


Q:

What famous person, living or dead, would you most like to meet?


A:

George Orwell.


*Photo by Jake Fabricius.