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304 pages, Hardcover
Published June 10, 2025
I don't fear being dead. I fear not being alive. [p. 243]In 2003, Jonathan Gluck was diagnosed with multiple myeloma, a blood cancer, and was told that he had between eighteen months and three years to live. Twenty-two years later he published a book about his illness.
During my radiation treatments, I have seen patients with skin burns so severe they look like arson victims. During my treatment sessions, I have seen a gentleman wet his pants in his chair while he was sleeping; a woman collapse on her way to the bathroom, split her head open and bleed all over the floor; and toilets covered in splatter from diarrhea. During my hospital stays, I have seen patients who were bald, emaciated, and as pale as the hospital white blankets they were wrapped in to keep warm. I have heard moans, screams, and sounds I frankly don't know how to describe. Cancer wards have been called houses of horror. I wish I could dispute the characterization [p. 243].Although multiple myeloma is a relatively rare -- and currently incurable -- cancer (Tom Brokaw is a famous patient), there are sure to be some readers who turn to Gluck's book for suggestions about dealing with it. Although he details many of his treatments, the absence of an index makes them difficult to keep track of. Nevertheless his book is a solid testimony to the possibility of long-term survival: A diagnosis of multiple myeloma is no longer an automatic death sentence, at least if you have access to the very best medical care, and the insurance to pay for it.