“Unnerving. . . . An absorbing picture of dawning apocalypse. . . . A  disturbing portrait of a society convinced it’s close to utopia when a  cure for aging is invented. Unsurprisingly, it doesn’t take long for that  seeming utopia to dissolve into a planet-overstressed from  overpopulation, food and fuel shortages, and general lawlessness-going  into systemic failure. . . . The Postmortal is a suitably chilling  entry into the ‘it's-the-end-of-the-world’ canon.”
—The Austin Chronicle
“Magary’s vision of future technology and science is eerily realistic. .  . . By the time you finish, you’ll want to hold your loved ones close and  stockpile bottles of water. If all else fails, you could potentially make  a living selling them a few decades from now.”
—The New York Press
“An exciting page turner. . . . Drew Magary is an excellent writer. This  is his first novel but he tells the story masterfully. . . . The most  frightening thing about The Postmortal is that this could really  happen-it’s not a supernatural story, but it’s even more terrifying than  zombie apocalypse.”
 —Mark Frauenfelder, BoingBoing
“The first novel from a popular sports blogger and humorist puts a darkly  comic spin on a science fiction premise and hits the sweet spot between  Margaret Atwood and Kurt Vonnegut. . . . [Magary] understands that satire  is most effective when it gives the real world a gently absurd nudge,  then lets its characters react much as we ourselves might under the same  circumstances.”
 —Ron Hogan, Shelf Awareness
“Immortality has figured in a number of sf novels prior to this one, but  never, to my experience, in this way. . . . A very clear-eyed picture,  one I don’t think has been drawn before. . . . The Postmortal surprised me in a good way.”
 —Michelle West, Fantasy & Science Fiction magazine
“The Postmortal is a punchy, fast-paced and endearing story. . . .  As the novel progresses, it turns from a snappy morality tale, to a noir-ish revenge fable, to an action movie; complete with guns, rogue  religious cults and government-sanctioned hit men. The narrative comes to  us through John’s blog entries and collections of news bytes and pundit  commentary. Through his sixty years as a 29-year-old, he experiences all  the love, pain, grief, and terror of a standard lifetime and is still in  good enough shape to kick some ass at the end. Like much good dystopian  fiction, The Postmortal is an at-times unflattering commentary on  human beings, present, past and future, that hits the mark in many ways.  . . . For anyone intrigued with Life Extension science, it's a fun  examination of our fears and expectations.”
 —The Nervous Breakdown
“A darkly comic, totally gonzo, and effectively frightening population-bomb dystopia in the spirit of Logan’s Run, Soylent Green, and  the best episodes of The Twilight Zone.”
 —Neal Pollack, author of Alternadad and Stretch
“As insanely entertaining as it is ambitious, The Postmortal takes us into an America set in the next few years and coming apart  under the onslaught of a dreadful new plague--that of human  immortality. Magary possesses an explosive imagination and let loose in  The Postmortal, he creates an alternate history of the near  future that feels real and is probably inevitable. Read The  Postmortal if you want to find out what happened to the human race  in our last violent and absurd few years in New York.”
 —Evan Wright, author of Generation Kill
“I suppose you could wait for the inevitable Postmortal movie. But then you might miss Magary’s rendering, his word play, his singular sense of humor. A book that is, at once bracingly funny and—get this, Deadspin Nation—unmistakably poignant.”
—L. Jon Wertheim, coauthor of Scorecasting
“As someone who is totally freaked out by the thought of dying, The  Postmortal really stood on top of me and peed on my face.  It’s  depiction of the future isn’t filled with crappy robots fighting Will  Smith. It’s filled with eerily realistic portrayals of what the future  could look like and does it all in an incredibly entertaining story.”
 —Justin Halpern, author of Sh*t My Dad Says