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Please join us for an evening with former Houstonian S. L. (Sandi) Wisenberg, author of The Adventures of Cancer Bitch. Check out her award-winning blog at http://cancerbitch.blogspot.com.
Cancer is S. L. Wisenberg’s muse, and Cancer Bitch is her blog. Drawing on a wealth of personal, literary, and historical sources—from Jewish liturgy to the first crude mastectomies, from Anne Frank to Emma Goldman—The Adventures of Cancer Bitch creates an indelible image of a politically engaged, self-aware (sometimes neurotic) woman facing a daunting disease with equal measures of humor, well-founded fear, and keen intelligence.
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 survivors’ 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 El, taught while one-breasted, and
attended High Holiday services and a Passover seder.
Wisenberg’s writing has been compared to a mix of Leon Wieseltier and Fran Lebowitz, and in this book she has Wieseltier’s erudition and Lebowitz’s self-deprecating cleverness: “If 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.”
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 everyone—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.
"The Adventures of Cancer Bitch is witty and relentless, surprising and honest...this is a cornucopia of breast cancer information as well as a very smart, funny read from an excellent writer."—Audrey Niffenegger, author, The Time Traveler’s Wife
S. L. Wisenberg grew up in Houston and helped edit the Three Penny Press at Bellaire High School. She is the author of a short story collection, The Sweetheart Is In; a personal essay collection about Jewish identity, Holocaust Girls: History, Memory & Other Obsessions; and The Adventures of Cancer Bitch, based on her award-winning blog. She has received grants and fellowships from the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, the Illinois Arts Council and the National Endowment for the Humanities. Her work is widely published and anthologized, most recently in Creating Nonfiction: a Guide and AnthologyCrafting the Very Short Story: an Anthology of 100 Masterpieces. She has degrees from the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University and the Iowa Writers' Workshop. She is the co-director of the MA/MFA in Creative Writing program at Northwestern.