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"In whatever 'race' life may be, I have very abruptly become a finalist." Thus, in the artful cadences and the searing honesty which we have come to expect, Christopher Hitchens announced his approaching demise to Vanity Fair readers. With typical persistence, he documented his year and a half struggle with esophageal cancer until the death in December 2011. This collection of those writings stands as one of the most lucid and candid reflections of a passage that we all will someday take. Now in trade paperback and NOOK Book. Editor's recommendation. (P.S. Reviewing Mortality for the New York Times, Christopher Buckley Hitchens called writing in this book "diamond-hard and brilliant.")
Overview
On June 8, 2010, while on a book tour for his bestselling memoir, Hitch-22, Christopher Hitchens was stricken in his New York hotel room with excruciating pain in his chest and thorax. As he would later write in the first of a series of award-winning columns for Vanity Fair, he suddenly found himself being deported "from the country of the well across the stark frontier that marks off the land of malady." Over the next eighteen months, until his death in Houston on December 15, 2011, he wrote constantly and ...