Katherine Mortenhoe lives in a near future very similar to the present  day. Only in her time, dying from anything but old age is unheard of;  death has been cured. So when Katherine is diagnosed with a terminal  brain disease brought on by an inability to process an ever increasing  volume of sensory input, she immediately becomes a celebrity to the  “pain-starved public.” But Katherine rejects her tragic role: She will  not agree to be the star of a Human Destiny TV show, her last days will  not be documented or broadcast. What she doesn’t realize is that from  the moment of diagnosis she’s been watched, not only by television  producers but by a new kind of program host, a man with a camera behind  his unsleeping eyes.
Like Margaret Atwood’s MaddAddam trilogy, Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go, and the television series Black Mirror, The Continuous Katherine Mortenhoe is a thrilling psychological drama that is as wise about human nature as it is about the nature of technology.
