
The Price of Experience
Writings on Living with Cancer
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Narrated by:
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Alex Hyde-White
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By:
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Mike Marqusee
About this listen
Writer and political activist Mike Marqusee was diagnosed with multiple myeloma, a type of blood cancer, in the summer of 2007. At first, disinclined to share his misery with others, he was reluctant to write about his illness. But he then came to realize that doing so provided a precious continuity with his life as a writer before contracting the disease, and a way of reaching out to a wider world that the illness made physically less accessible. Writing allowed him to address what he saw as a variety of insidious platitudes that surround cancer, often connected to the individualistic idea that the sufferer must be brave in battling the disease, with the inevitable corollary that those who succumb have, in some measure, brought it on themselves.
And so Marqusee begins to write about his illness. Not just his own symptoms and feelings, but the responses of friends to the news that he is ill and the way these reflect broader social attitudes towards the sick. He describes the political struggles occurring in St Bartholomew's, the London hospital that cares for him, and the crisis in Britain's National Health Service (NHS) more generally, at a time of harrowing cutbacks. Big Pharma, whose drugs keep Marqusee alive but are sold to the NHS at prices reflecting the power and greed of a ruthless extortionist, is the subject for particularly astringent scrutiny.
The observations about cancer in this book are never trite or sentimental. They are acute, moving, impassioned and political. And they convey important, shared truths, both personal and social, about an illness that will affect one in three people in the course of their lives.
©2014 Mike Marqusee (P)2015 Audible, Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...
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- sb
- 12-18-17
Last chapter the best
This book is primarily about protecting the a UK's NGA and the sad reality of the lack of such a humane system in the US. It is also an indictment of the shameful U.S. drug companies, financial institutions and politics aimed at getting rid of the NHS and preventing a similar system in the US.
This is not a book about the specifics of his illness and battle with cancer, although he does discuss it. The last chapter was particularly good.
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- KRN
- 12-06-24
decent and humanist but ultimately empty
well written. a decent humanist voice. but ultimately without any particular lasting insight or innovation. given that he has passed away i want to leave a good review, but in truth this book was a waste of time.
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