Time to Read
3 hrs 9 mins

Reading Time

3 hrs 9 mins

How long to read Undying?

The estimated word count of Undying is 47,120 words.

A person reading at the average speed of 250 words/min, will finish the book in 3 hrs 9 mins. At a slower speed of 150 words/min, they will finish it in 5 hrs 15 mins. At a faster speed of 450 words/min, they will finish it in 1 hrs 45 mins.

Undying - 47,120 words
Reading Speed Time to Read
Slow 150 words/min 5 hrs 15 mins
Average 250 words/min 3 hrs 9 mins
Fast 450 words/min 1 hrs 45 mins
Undying by Anne Boyer
Authors
Anne Boyer

More about Undying

47,120 words

Word Count

for Undying

320 pages

Pages
Hardcover: 320 pages
Paperback: 320 pages

5 hours and 4 minutes

Audiobook length


Description

WINNER OF THE 2020 PULITZER PRIZE IN GENERAL NONFICTION"The Undying is a startling, urgent intervention in our discourses about sickness and health, art and science, language and literature, and mortality and death. In dissecting what she terms 'the ideological regime of cancer,' Anne Boyer has produced a profound and unforgettable document on the experience of life itself." ―Sally Rooney, author of Normal People"Anne Boyer’s radically unsentimental account of cancer and the 'carcinogenosphere' obliterates cliche. By demonstrating how her utterly specific experience is also irreducibly social, she opens up new spaces for thinking and feeling together. The Undying is an outraged, beautiful, and brilliant work of embodied critique." ―Ben Lerner, author of The Topeka SchoolA week after her forty-first birthday, the acclaimed poet Anne Boyer was diagnosed with highly aggressive triple-negative breast cancer. For a single mother living paycheck to paycheck who had always been the caregiver rather than the one needing care, the catastrophic illness was both a crisis and an initiation into new ideas about mortality and the gendered politics of illness. A twenty-first-century Illness as Metaphor, as well as a harrowing memoir of survival, The Undying explores the experience of illness as mediated by digital screens, weaving in ancient Roman dream diarists, cancer hoaxers and fetishists, cancer vloggers, corporate lies, John Donne, pro-pain ”dolorists,” the ecological costs of chemotherapy, and the many little murders of capitalism. It excoriates the pharmaceutical industry and the bland hypocrisies of ”pink ribbon culture” while also diving into the long literary line of women writing about their own illnesses and ongoing deaths: Audre Lorde, Kathy Acker, Susan Sontag, and others.A genre-bending memoir in the tradition of The Argonauts, The Undying will break your heart, make you angry enough to spit, and show you contemporary America as a thing both desperately ill and occasionally, perversely glorious. Includes black-and-white illustrations