ALOPECIA: The Unapologetic Truth!
Black History Sale
Alopecia: The Unapologetic Truth
By Brandi R. Edinburgh-Tucker
“This is not your mama’s version of alopecia.”
This groundbreaking digital book challenges everything you’ve been told about hair loss — and why so many people are still losing their hair despite doing “all the right things.”
Alopecia: The Unapologetic Truth pulls back the curtain on the systems that quietly contribute to thinning, shedding, and scalp breakdown — including the medical industry, the food industry, and the cosmetic industry — and explains how misinformation, poor testing, and surface-level solutions keep people stuck in cycles of damage and confusion.
This book does not blame — it exposes.
Inside, you’ll learn how hair loss is often tied to what’s happening inside the body, not just on the scalp. It explores how incomplete or inaccurate blood work, ignored deficiencies, and overlooked biological signals can contribute to hair shedding, breakage, and follicle shutdown — long before anyone ever mentions alopecia.
And yes, it goes there.
The book also dismantles the myth of “4C hair,” explaining how this label was created by commercial systems — not biology — to sell products, reinforce hair hierarchy, and disconnect people from understanding their true hair structure and needs.
In the back of the book, readers are given a comprehensive blood-test reference guide — the same markers professionals use to evaluate what’s happening beneath the surface when hair begins to thin, shed, or stop growing.
This is not a how-to shampoo guide.
This is a truth book.It connects the dots between:
• Hair loss and internal health
• Scalp breakdown and inflammation
• Product chemistry and biological stress
• Misinformation and profit-driven marketingAnd it challenges readers to stop outsourcing responsibility for their hair — and start understanding how their own body, habits, and decisions affect the crown they wear every day.
Alopecia: The Unapologetic Truth is for anyone who has ever been told “everything looks normal” while their hair kept falling out — and knew, deep down, that something wasn’t being said.

