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The Worried Well

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The Worried Well, selected by Eduardo C. Corral as the winner of the 2024 Autumn House Rising Writer Prize, is a tragicomic collection that explores the intersection of anxiety and safety in a chaotic world.


Anthony Immergluck balances the thin lines between healing and ailing, between humor and tragedy throughout this exceptional debut poetry collection. Reveling at precipices of imminent disaster while grieving at thresholds of relief, The Worried Well asks, how do we live loving and full lives while being confronted with our mortality? How does language carry us between liminal spaces?

The “worried well” is a term often used pejoratively by medical professionals to describe a group of patients who may be lacking visible symptoms but opt for testing and preventative interventions, who seek treatments for ailments that don’t manifest readily in medical diagnostics. Immergluck unpacks the term by writing in the spaces where worry and wellness meet.

Despite the profound subjects explored, the collection carries us with a keen sense of humor, grounds us in the everyday, and rises to meet us with unexpected ruptures or sutures of language on each page. Summoning the restless dybbuk of Jewish mythology as well as David and Goliath, navigating hospital rooms, and surviving economic precarity, Immergluck creates a voice that is utterly new and needed in the literary landscape, a voice that reflects, “I don’t / know why I told a worry / child not to worry when / surely the trick is to give / the worry a name and then / to call it again and again.”

128 pages, Paperback

Published April 8, 2025

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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Ada.
525 reviews334 followers
May 1, 2025
La poesia d'una persona altament hipocondríaca i paranoica. Constato un fet, m'ha semblat molt bé. Per sort manté el sentit de l'humor. M'agrada com pensa la mort. Són els poemes que he gaudit més. I l'homenatge als avis, també bonic.
Profile Image for Daniel Parsons.
136 reviews1 follower
June 10, 2025
Met the author at a live reading - such a nice person to accompany a good collection of poems!
Profile Image for Mihalena.
15 reviews1 follower
June 4, 2025
Dark and funny and tender and eager to read it again 🌱
Profile Image for Lisa.
Author 32 books174 followers
April 10, 2025
Immergluck’s collection in The Worried Well consists of 48 poems in two sections, The Worry, The Well. The first section is made of poems of zealous melodrama, some wry and self-aggrandizing, such as Narcissus at the Pharmacy in which the author is concerned about his legacy. The opening piece, “Worry (the Dybbuk),” is a tribute to life today, focusing on worry, worry, worry: I worry that were we to / land on an island without / worry our worries would / starve or worse, survive… In “Deadsong” the author poses 17 short segments of verse about manners of death that range from drastic to fantastic, poignant to manic: crashes, drugs, old and famous, martyrdom, skateboarding…lots of fun with asides; I can hear the stanzas in the voice of Gene Wilder. Likewise, the droll wit of “Social Studies”: “In the end we all become whoever was nice to us when we were fifteen,” I hear in the voice of Billy Collins.

Yet there is a glimmer of hope in these tributes to concern, such as in “Burden of Care” in which the author finds some reversal of dread: But I don’t want to think / about my body anymore. / I want to learn Spanish / for real and for good. / I want to watch all day / for waterbirds / and run to tell my wife.

Included are poems of illness, about surgeons dropping lines, about Hospital Art: And I have learned to love the textiles / donated by the synagogue. I have / made peace with the tulips. Who doesn’t love a poem that combines palliative care, Rachel Maddow, Polaroid, Jello-O, and isthmus in contemplation? Intermingled are poem memories of grandparents – patience with Grandpa at the end of his life as they attempt to navigate the Lord of the Rings, and finding courageous Grandma taking back the life of her son who thought he should enlist in the army at age thirteen; another found letter from an earlier generation.

In the second part, the Well, a collection of memories such as a childhood home, dumpster-diving for a memorable sofa (And you should hear the song it sings / when both our weights are lain upon it.), margaritas in a Nalgene in a tent in the rain…the reader engages with more lyric and rhythmic language; even forgiveness in “Mise En Place”: Because she loves me, / we do not address the / rawness in the center. / She eats it all / and so do I.

Self-reflection is also a major theme of the poetry in this section. The authors shares the raw emotional distress of fatherhood in “Bus Stop”; the worry of being enough, of being able to love a baby.

The Worried Well is a beautiful collection of frayed humanity, of culture, memories, loss and living for the future which will enchant poetry lovers. One of my favorite parts is the dedication, which you’ll have to read for yourself.
321 reviews5 followers
April 30, 2025
A grounded, but still very poetic (I mean, it's poetry, but I mean the writing is still eloquent and lyrical, etc.) collection. Meditates on the weighty stuff of quotidian life -- how to be a person in relationship with other people, the transition of youth to adulthood, illness (from what doesn't kill someone to what does,) on and on. Very good, imo.
Profile Image for Mary Ardery.
Author 1 book15 followers
October 14, 2025
I'm a big fan of Autumn House Press's books and The Worried Well was no exception. Immergluck's voice feels idiosyncratic in a way that I really appreciated. There's both humor and deep sincerity. Many poems surprised me at some point, which is a great strength in my opinion. I look forward to rereading this book.
1 review
April 18, 2025
Such a beautiful collection chock-full of clever & creative use of language that will have you underlining every other stanza. I laughed, I cried & I immediately wanted to pick it up & read it again
Profile Image for kate :).
35 reviews2 followers
October 17, 2025
I loved this! The poems have are poignant yet just the right amount of humorous
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

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