The Undying

  • The Undying: Pain, vulnerability, mortality, medicine, art, time, dreams, data, exhaustion, cancer, and care
    By Anne Boyer

    The Undying is an outraged, beautiful, and brilliant work of embodied critique." —Ben Lerner, author of The Topeka School A week after her forty-first birthday, the acclaimed poet Anne Boyer was diagnosed with highly aggressive triple ...

  • The Undying: Pain, vulnerability, mortality, medicine, art, time, dreams, data, exhaustion, cancer, and care
    By Anne Boyer

    The Undying is an outraged, beautiful, and brilliant work of embodied critique." —Ben Lerner, author of The Topeka School A week after her forty-first birthday, the acclaimed poet Anne Boyer was diagnosed with highly aggressive triple ...

  • The Undying
    By Ethan Reid

    THEY HAVE COME FROM THE STARS… In this riveting apocalyptic thriller for fans of The Passage and The Walking Dead, a mysterious event plunges Paris into darkness and a young American must lead her friends to safety—and escape the ...

  • The Undying
    By Joseph Eric Crawford

    He noted that it appeared rather short for the Undying; even Krystyn broke the five-seven mark. “Howdy, Ms. Barton,” said a man's voice, thick with a country accent. “Always in the wrong place at the wrong time, ain't ya?” “Sheriff?

  • The Undying: A Meditation on Modern Illness
    By Anne Boyer

    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

  • The Undying: A Meditation on Modern Illness
    By Anne Boyer

    In The Undying - at once her harrowing memoir of survival, and a 21st-century Illness as Metaphor - Boyer draws on sources from ancient Roman dream diarists to cancer vloggers to explore the experience of illness.

  • The Undying: A Meditation on Modern Illness
    By Anne Boyer

    When Boyer was diagnosed with highly aggressive triple-negative breast cancer, the illness was both a crisis and an initiation into new ideas about mortality and the gendered politics of illness.