59 pages 1 hour read

Drew Magary

The Postmortal

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 2011

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Important Quotes

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“In its entirety, the collection contains thousands of entries and several hundred thousand words, but for the sake of privity and general readability, they have been edited and abridged into what we believe constitutes an essential narrative, and incontrovertible evidence that the cure for aging must never again be legalized.”


(Prologue, Page 2)

The novel’s Prologue produces mystery as John Farrell is introduced in the third person. Much of the language used in the Prologue is unfamiliar, meant to establish that the events detailed in the book are in a future that we cannot understand without the context granted by John. However, it is also reinforced that the novel is a tragedy that ends in outlawing the anti-aging cure.

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“Normally, any decision I confront is forced to navigate the seemingly endless bureaucracy of my conscience. Not this one. This impulse was allowed to bypass all that nonsense, to shoot through the gauzy tangle of second thoughts and emerge from me as pristine as when it first originated deep within the recesses of my mind. It was a want. A hunger. A naked compulsion that was bulletproof to logic and reason. No argument could be made against my profound interest in not dying.”


(Part 1, Chapter 1, Page 6)

John introduces the idea of the cure for aging as a need that is more primal than the typical needs that he experiences in his day-to-day life. This implies that his fear of death and need for self-preservation outweigh logic, replacing his other intentions. John’s self-description here also shows how he changes as time goes on. While the John from the beginning of the novel is a highly logical individual who only sometimes makes decisions based on gut instinct, he increasingly becomes an instinct-driven person who follows his impulses rather than logical thought.

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“Death is what makes us humble before God—knowing that our lives will come to an end and that when that end arrives we will be forced to answer for them.”


(Part 1, Chapter 2, Page 12)

One of the main arguments against the cure is the idea that unaging people will no longer have humility. This reveals a religious ideology that not all the characters share, ultimately