In the late 1980s, a bright teenager walked the halls of St. Columba’s School in New Delhi with a quiet intensity. Siddhartha Mukherjee wasn’t your usual top student, he was the kind of mind that lingered on questions longer, looked for patterns where others saw facts, and found poetry even in biology. In 1989, he graduated with the school’s highest honor, the Sword of Honour. But what followed would take him across continents, into the most elite classrooms in the world, and eventually, into the hearts of millions as a bestselling science writer.
A Stanford start
After his school years in India, Mukherjee took a leap that many Indian students dream of: he landed a spot at Stanford University. There, as a biology major, he joined the lab of Nobel Laureate Paul Berg, working on how genes change the behavior of cancer cells. It wasn’t just about textbooks anymore: he was inside the machinery of real discovery. He graduated with honors, was inducted into Phi Beta Kappa, and received his Bachelor of Science degree in 1993.
The Rhodes scholar from Delhi
But Mukherjee wasn’t done. He won a Rhodes Scholarship, one of the world’s most prestigious academic honors, and moved to the University of Oxford, joining Magdalen College. In Oxford’s quiet libraries and buzzing research labs, he focused on the immune system’s response to viral infections. By 1997, he had completed his D.Phil. in immunology, a doctorate that gave him the foundation to explore the inner life of cells for decades to come.
Harvard, hospitals, and healing
Still, something was missing. Mukherjee wanted not just to study cells but to treat the people whose lives were shaped by them. So, he entered Harvard Medical School, where he earned his M.D. in 2000. The next few years were intense: residency at Massachusetts General Hospital, followed by a fellowship in hematology-oncology at the Dana–Farber Cancer Institute, one of the world’s top cancer centers.These years shaped him both as a doctor and as a thinker. He witnessed how medicine sometimes succeeded, sometimes failed — and always told a story. That sense of story would soon become his trademark.
From clinic to classroom and page
In 2009, Mukherjee joined Columbia University Medical Center in New York as an assistant professor. By then, he was treating cancer patients, running a lab, and beginning to write a book that would change everything.That book, The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer, became a Pulitzer Prize-winning bestseller in 2011. It wasn’t just a science book. It was history, memoir, detective story, and meditation all in one. It showed readers what cancer really was — and who doctors and patients really were in that fight.
The legacy of a global scholar
Today, Siddhartha Mukherjee is not just a physician or a scientist. He’s a bridge between medicine and the public. Someone who makes complicated biology human. He’s also a Padma Shri awardee, a Time 100 influential figure, and founder of an AI-driven drug discovery startup, Manas AI, launched in 2025.Yet behind all the accolades is a deeply academic journey, from Delhi to Stanford, Oxford to Harvard, that reflects the power of global education when matched with purpose and passion.Mukherjee’s path shows that education is not just about degrees — it’s about finding the questions that keep you up at night, and then finding the tools to answer them. His story is proof that a student in a Delhi classroom can one day write the biography of a disease, and in doing so, write part of the history of science itself.