My only nitpick is that Lisa refused to use quotations when a person was speaking (dialogue). I get that it's nonfiction and it might be her writing style, but because I didn't know where the dialogue stopped and the prose started, it had me reading run-on sentences that were not meant to be run-ons. Really frustrating, quotation marks have a grammatical function for a reason. The actual contents of the book are very eye-opening, and even insane, with it being true stories. You never know what someone's life is like behind closed doors.

I didn't really like the ending but after reading the Acknowledgements, it makes a bit more sense.

The book also has a content warning so that was thoughtful of the author.

It feels like a live reading of a doctor accepting death and finding meaning in the life he has before and after his cancer diagnosis, with the diagnosis answering that.