Don't Die by Bryan Johnson
- Pragya Bhatt
- Apr 19
- 2 min read
Updated: Apr 21
As a reader I like to think of myself as a democratic one. I always finish a book, regardless of how boring it may be. I feel like we owe a writer that much. However, this book has forced me to change this. I can't finish this book. It's not worth reading. And I wouldn't recommend it to anyone, for any reason whatsoever.
Bryan Johnson sets out to write something bold and philosophical, his blueprint for defeating death — but ends up as a confusing and self-important slog. Known for his extreme anti-aging protocols and viral biohacking routines, Johnson uses this self-published book to present what he believes is a radical rethinking of life, health, and mortality. Unfortunately, instead of offering clarity or insight, the book buries its message under layers of tedious dialogue and half-baked metaphor.
The narrative unfolds through conversations between fictional characters like Game Play, Model Builder, Blueprint, Dark Humor, Seeks Authority, and Relentless. These are clearly meant to represent facets of Johnson’s psyche or philosophy. Through them, he attempts to explore themes like consciousness, free will, and the purpose of life. But the result is more baffling than profound. The dialogue is dry, stilted, and often painfully forced — telling instead of showing, explaining instead of evoking. The characters drone on in long, convoluted speeches that read like philosophical rambling dressed up as narrative.
Johnson tries to make his ideas more “gripping” by peppering in examples — a trek up Kilimanjaro, a decrepit sheep, and other metaphorical anecdotes meant to be vivid or symbolic. But these analogies fall flat. They lack emotional weight, and often feel shoehorned in to make simple ideas seem more complex than they are. It’s as if the book is trying very hard to sound deep and intellectual, while avoiding real vulnerability or grounded storytelling.
At its core, Don't Die is a missed opportunity. The subject matter — aging, mortality, human potential — deserves thoughtfulness and depth. But instead, readers are left to navigate a meandering script of symbolic characters and heavy-handed monologues. What should feel urgent and vital comes off as sterile and inaccessible. For a book about living longer, it has surprisingly little life in it.
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