The Cancer Diet: A Memoir on Resilience and Redemption
by Frank M. Anderson
When Frank Anderson was diagnosed with skin cancer, he thought the story would be about the illness. What followed instead was a deeply personal unraveling-and a transformation he never saw coming.
In this raw and reflective memoir, The Cancer Diet begins with a quiet crisis and expands into something much larger: a journey through grief, addiction, estrangement, adoption, reconnection, and the quiet, ordinary weight of being alive. With searing vulnerability and dark humor, Anderson tells the story not just of surviving cancer-but of surviving himself.
As he navigates fatherhood, heartbreak, religious disillusionment, and the shock of discovering he is the product of a teenage rape, Anderson threads together a narrative that is part survival story, part spiritual reckoning. He confronts the ghosts of childhood trauma, lifelong mental health struggles, and a world that often rewards cruelty more than kindness.
But The Cancer Diet is also a story of growth. Of resilience. Of writing as healing. Collaborating with AI midway through the book, Anderson uses every tool available to sort through memory, language, and identity-not to polish the pain, but to make it legible. The result is a book that is equal parts confessional and creative, chaotic and clear-eyed, tender and unflinching.
This is not a memoir about triumph in the traditional sense. There is no neat redemption arc. There is only honesty. Rebuilding. And the daily choice to keep going.
Through deeply personal anecdotes-like losing his two front teeth in preschool, discovering weed and friendship in a South Carolina suburb, or trying and failing to make peace with romantic and familial expectations-Anderson gives readers a memoir that's messy, human, and deeply relatable.
He introduces us to the people who shaped him: Miller, his son and greatest source of pride; Debbie, his birth mother whose rediscovery brings both clarity and grief; Taylor, a childhood friend lost too soon to suicide; and Elizabeth, a cousin whose illness became a lifelong shadow of unspoken guilt and awe.
Ultimately, The Cancer Diet is a story about what we keep and what we let go. About choosing to speak the hard truths. About the quiet power of surviving, not because life is fair-but because we still have something to say.
This book is for anyone who's ever lived in the gray areas. For anyone who's grieved without knowing how. For anyone who's tried to be good in a world that often rewards the opposite. And for anyone who's still trying.