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How Not to Up and Die from Lack of Sleep: A Doctor’s Guide to Better Sleep That Boosts Your Energy, Reverses Exhaustion & Restores Your Health

How Not to Up and Die from Lack of Sleep is a broad and practical guide to sleep that blends memoir, popular science, and self-help in a way that feels authentic. Author Jerome Puryear structures it in four parts, moving from the biology of sleep and the mechanics of common disorders into the punishing realities of shift work, then out toward treatment options, wind-down practices, supplements, sleep tech, and even AI-assisted care. The central argument is simple but forceful: sleep isn’t a decorative wellness habit, it’s foundational, and modern life has made casualties of far more people than we like to admit. That idea lands because he keeps returning to concrete human scenes, from his own season of new-parent exhaustion and predawn drives while fighting microsleeps, to later discussions of insomnia, apnea, caffeine, burnout, and the stubborn fantasy that we can “catch up later.”

Puryear writes like someone who has both treated exhaustion and been humiliated by it, and that gives the book a warmth a more clinical manual might never earn. I especially liked the way he threads a humane idea through the whole thing: that many of us are, in effect, “circadian shift workers” now, even if we don’t clock in at midnight. That reframing is smart, and it opens the book up beyond nurses, residents, and first responders to the ordinary overextended reader staring into a phone at 12:47 a.m. Some of his best passages arrive when he steps back from raw advice and notices the culture around sleep, like the historical section on segmented sleep and the sharp observations about hustle culture teaching people to wear deprivation like a medal. Those moments give the book texture and keep it from becoming just another optimization handbook.

Its great strength is range. That range makes it read more like an all-in compendium. The transitions from deeply personal material to reference-style sections on medications, cannabis compounds, supplements, devices, and AI can be quick. Still, I liked that he doesn’t romanticize “natural” solutions or demonize technology outright. A body scan, progressive muscle relaxation, and a quieter bedroom sit beside CPAP data, virtual assessments, and AI tools such as predictive sleep-stage models, which gives the book a welcome intellectual balance. I appreciated that the governing instinct is practical rather than trendy. He wants readers to build a durable life around sleep, not chase one magical fix.

I found this an earnest, useful, and surprisingly friendly book, one that is at its best when its science is lit from within by fatigue, humility, and hard-earned conviction. I’d recommend it especially to people who are exhausted enough to feel slightly estranged from themselves, along with shift workers, new parents, busy professionals, and readers who want a sleep book that acknowledges both physiology and the emotional loneliness of being worn thin. This is a book for people who don’t need sleep romanticized. They need it restored to its rightful dignity.

Pages: 350