The Adventures of Cancer Bitch

ยท University of Iowa Press
แžŸแŸ€แžœแž—แŸ…โ€‹แžขแŸแžกแžทแž…แžแŸ’แžšแžผแž“แžทแž…
170
แž‘แŸ†แž–แŸแžš
แž˜แžถแž“แžŸแžทแž‘แŸ’แž’แžท

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Wisenberg may have lost a breast, but she retained her humor, outrage, and skepticism toward common wisdom and most institutions. While following the prescribed protocols at the place she called Fancy Hospital, Wisenberg is unsparing in her descriptions of the fumblings of new doctors, her own awkward announcement to her students, and the mounds of unrecyclable plastic left at a survivorsโ€™ walk. Combining the personal with the political, she shares her research on the money spent on pink ribbons instead of preventing pollution, and the disparity in medical care between the insured and the uninsured. When chemotherapy made her bald, she decorated her head with henna swirls in front and an antiwar protest in back. During treatment, she also recorded the dailiness of life in Chicago as she rode the L, taught while one-breasted, and attended High Holiday services and a Passover seder.

Wisenbergโ€™s writing has been compared to a mix of Leon Wieseltier and Fran Lebowitz, and in this book, she has Wieseltierโ€™s erudition and Lebowitzโ€™s self-deprecating cleverness: โ€œIf anybody ever offers you the choice between suffering and depression, take the suffering. And I don't mean physical suffering. I mean emotional suffering. I am hereby endorsing psychic suffering over depression.โ€

From The Adventures of Cancer Bitch:

I found that when you invite people to a pre-mastectomy party, they show up. Even those with small children. The kids were so young that they didn't notice that most of the food had nipples. . . . I talked to everyoneโ€”about what I'm not sure. Probably about my surgery. Everyone told me how well I looked. I felt giddy. I was going to go under, but not yet; I was going to be cut, but not yet; I was going to be bald, but not yet. As my friend who had bladder cancer says: The thing about cancer is you feel great until they start treating you for it.

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S. L. Wisenberg is the author of "The Sweetheart Is In "and "Holocaust Girls: History, Memory, and Other Obsessions." The "New Yorker," "Ploughshares," "Tikkun," the "New England Review," and the "Michigan Quarterly Review" have published her poetry and prose, and her work has been widely anthologized, most recently in "Rules of Thumb: 73 Authors Reveal Their Fiction Writing Fixations," "Short Takes: Brief Encounters with Contemporary Nonfiction," and "Creating Nonfiction: A Guide and Anthology." She is a codirector of Northwestern University's MA/MFA in creative writing as well as a visiting scholar in Gender Studies at Northwestern. She also teaches at the University of Chicago Graham School of General Studies. Her blog Cancer Bitch can be read at http: //cancerbitch.blogspot.com/.

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