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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars My interpretations are so much different
Both the editorial reviews to me seem to imply that this book is not about dealing with deep and personal sorrow and it makes me wonder if they actually read it or if my perceptions are really so unique. Over the past two years I have lost people I loved. My mother died suddenly when I was not present, my father had alzheimers and died after a long illness in the...
Published on March 21, 2006 by toriokyo

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0 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars interesting but
Reading this book left me with a distinctly sour taste in my mouth. Almost every page offers some (real life) anecdote about a person who responded in a petty fashion to grief. There's a stoy about a girl who was mocked behind her back, and then after her death as well. There's a story about a woman who manipulated her mother's will to get the best possessions. And so it...
Published on January 11, 2006 by E. M. Bristol


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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars My interpretations are so much different, March 21, 2006
This review is from: The Farewell Chronicles: How We Really Respond to Death (Paperback)
Both the editorial reviews to me seem to imply that this book is not about dealing with deep and personal sorrow and it makes me wonder if they actually read it or if my perceptions are really so unique. Over the past two years I have lost people I loved. My mother died suddenly when I was not present, my father had alzheimers and died after a long illness in the hospital. We were on deathwatch for a week before he was removed from life support. This book touched me in ways I cannot explain and yet were so powerful I considered giving a copy of it to everyone who told me "this is for the best" or "it will be okay". As Joan Didion said in her equally powerful book The Year of Magical Thinking, in times of sadness she "turns to the literature" to make sense of it all. This is what I also do and I found The Farewell Chronicles does not deal with "petty" reactions to grief at all. It cuts through the gloss and fat and confronts the reader with difficult situations and emotions, she writes how our culture has erased traditional reactions to grief, the months of public mourning, the dress code, and how for thousands of years a funeral was something attended to by the whole tribe. She writes about how relief contrasts with guilt after years of caring for a chronically ill loved one, about how our apathy as a child turns to grief as we get old enough to understand death's impact. I could go on. This book brought me to tears many times. Perhaps this is because it is still so soon after my parent's death but it is also with a sense of relief that someone has put all these difficult emotions into words so eloquent I couldn't express it better myself. And of course, as my title says, I may just be different and this work is valuable for me in a different way it might be valuable for someone who has not experienced a recent loss. I'm just glad she wrote it and I highly recommend it.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Farewell Chronicles, June 27, 2007
This review is from: The Farewell Chronicles: How We Really Respond to Death (Paperback)
An excellent perspective on death and grieving. Fresh views on an old topic. I had actually received this book form a friend when my Mother passed away and had recently purchased it for 3 of my family members.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Made me realize I wasn't so weird., July 4, 2006
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Sheila Gaylord (Adel, Georgia USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Farewell Chronicles: How We Really Respond to Death (Paperback)
I got this book for myself after my father died. He had a long illness and I was one of his main caregivers. This book helped my realize that my lack of grief wasn't so weird as I had been led to believe. With everyone telling me of their sympathies and how "it will get better", I wasn't feeling much but a sense of relief. Both he and I had prepared and expected his death, it came as no surprise. I needed this book and plan on giving it to another friend who recently suffered a loss of a loved one. I found a great sense of help from its pages.
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4.0 out of 5 stars An interesting book, November 7, 2007
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This review is from: The Farewell Chronicles: How We Really Respond to Death (Paperback)
This book was an interesting read. I was caught by the title and the words below the title--'how we really respond to death' The word really is in italics. Like other books that I have read--memoir--there is some mention of books written by the authors that are quoted in this book..I have made a list of the books and authors--it makes for more reading..which is a good thing right?

I am going check into the book "Party of one: The Loners' manifesto' another book the author wrote.

:)
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0 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars interesting but, January 11, 2006
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This review is from: The Farewell Chronicles: How We Really Respond to Death (Paperback)
Reading this book left me with a distinctly sour taste in my mouth. Almost every page offers some (real life) anecdote about a person who responded in a petty fashion to grief. There's a stoy about a girl who was mocked behind her back, and then after her death as well. There's a story about a woman who manipulated her mother's will to get the best possessions. And so it goes. Not very appetizing, however true to life such reactions may be.
Do people really feel all these things when their loved one dies? Perhaps, but isn't it a sweeping assertion to say so? And will giving this book to someone who is grieving really make them feel any better? Somehow I doubt it.

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The Farewell Chronicles: How We Really Respond to Death
The Farewell Chronicles: How We Really Respond to Death by Anneli S. Rufus (Paperback - May 10, 2005)
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