During the US book tour for his memoir Hitch-22 Christopher Hitchens collapsed in his New York hotel room to excoriating pain in his chest & thorax. As he would later write in the first of a series of deeply moving Vanity Fair pieces he was being deported from the country of the well across the stark frontier that marks off the land of malady. Over the next year he underwent the brutal gamut of modern cancer treatment enduring catastrophic levels of suffering & eventually losing his voice. Mortality is the most meditative piece of writing Hitchens has ever produced; at once an unsparingly honest account of the ravages of his disease an examination of cancer etiquette & the coda to a lifetime of fierce debate & peerless prose. In this eloquent confrontation with mortality Hitchens returns a human face to a disease that has become a contemporary cipher of suffering.