"Hypochondria tends to be regarded as the exaggeration if not complete fabrication of ailments or illness. In this important and beautifully written book, however, Susannah Mintz provides a very different account of essential expression, profound reflection, and often untapped potential for making meaningful personal and sociocultural connections." - David Bolt, Professor and Director of the Centre for Culture and Disability Studies, Liverpool Hope University "Hypochondria is a capacious and audacious bookcapacious in its investigation of an impressive range of representations of the condition, audacious in its open-mindedness toward this often dismissed, if not maligned, complaint. Mintz regards hypochondria as a legitimate identity position, a not necessarily pathological reaction to being a bodymind. Indeed, she dares to suggest that hypochondria poses a challenge to compulsory healthiness that we should attend to, rather than disregard." - G. Thomas Couser, Professor of English and Founding Director of Disability Studies Program, Hofstra University "Mintz provides a fresh and rich account of the surprisingly creative and communicative potential of hypochondria, attentive to what it reveals about medical and ableist norms, old age, care, and discrimination. The pleasure of reading Hypochondria comes not only from its honed prose but the challenge it poses to think, even to know, differently." - Jennifer Cooke, Professor of English, Loughborough University and author of Contemporary Feminist Life-writing: The New Audacity