· Early in Joshua Cody’s sprightly, manic cancer memoir, “ [Sic],” the author pauses to explain the musical significance of the “golden ratio” — the moment, almost two-thirds of the way Estimated Reading Time: 8 mins. · “[sic],” Joshua Cody’s raunchy memoir, recounts his search for reasons to live as he fights cancer and what he calls “the guilt of the ill.”Estimated Reading Time: 6 mins. · [sic] by Joshua Cody Joshua Cody’s new memoir [sic] is partly the story of how he—a young man living in New York City, a composer, a descendant of Buffalo Bill Cody—was diagnosed with cancer (a lymphoma of some sort, he never really says) and the treatment didn’t work and he had to get a bone marrow transplant, but really it’s mostly the story of what it’s like to be inside Joshua Cody’s head.
Joshua Cody was about to receive his PhD from Columbia University when he was diagnosed with an aggressive cancer. He underwent six months of chemotherapy. The treatment failed. Expectations for survival plummeted. After consulting with several oncologists, he embarked on a risky course of high-dose chemotherapy, full body radiation, and an autologous bone marrow transplant. In a fevered. by. Joshua Cody. · Rating details · ratings · 68 reviews. Joshua Cody, a brilliant young composer, was about to receive his PhD when he was diagnosed with an aggressive cancer. Facing a bone-marrow transplant and full radiation, he charts his struggle: the fury, the tendency to self-destruction, and the ruthless grasping for life. Joshua Cody was about to receive his PhD from Columbia University when he was diagnosed with cancer. He underwent six months of chemotherapy. The treatment failed. Expectations for survival plummeted. After consulting with several oncologists, he embarked on a risky course of high-dose chemotherapy, full body radiation.
“[sic],” Joshua Cody’s raunchy memoir, recounts his search for reasons to live as he fights cancer and what he calls “the guilt of the ill.”. Early in Joshua Cody’s sprightly, manic cancer memoir, “ [Sic],” the author pauses to explain the musical significance of the “golden ratio” — the moment, almost two-thirds of the way. Joshua Cody, a brilliant young composer, was about to receive his PhD when he was diagnosed with an aggressive cancer. Facing a bone-marrow transplant and full radiation, he charts his struggle: the fury, the tendency to self-destruction, and the ruthless grasping for life and sensation; the encounter with a strange woman on Canal Street that leads to sex at his apartment;.
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