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The emperor of all maladies
The emperor of all maladies




the emperor of all maladies

Mukherjee, an assistant professor of medicine at Columbia and a staff physician at Columbia University Medical Center, writes that he originally intended the book to be a journal of his two years as an oncology fellow at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. It was with this dismal personal history as context that I picked up Siddhartha Mukherjee’s much-praised The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer.

the emperor of all maladies

About nine months after her diagnosis, just after we had decided to enroll her in a hospice program, she asked me, heartbreakingly: “Julia, when do we go to the doctor?” A week later, she was dead. Her faith in modern cancer medicine was as profound as it was misplaced. She persisted in believing that she might somehow be cured, despite having been told that a cure was impossible. “I want to live,” she told the oncologist. My mother, in her early 80s, was both valiant and hopeful about her treatment. She was nevertheless offered chemotherapy, which might have retarded the progress of her cancer there is no way of knowing for sure. In my case, the litany of loss includes a grandmother killed by colon cancer, a longtime friend who succumbed to metastatic breast cancer, and a mother who survived breast cancer in her 60s but died, two years ago, of stomach cancer.īy the time it was diagnosed, my mother’s disease was advanced, metastatic, and therefore inevitably fatal. It is difficult, if not impossible, to reach middle age without experiencing at close hand the ravages of cancer.






The emperor of all maladies