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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: L. S. DugdalePublisher: HarperCollins Publishers Inc Imprint: HarperCollins Edition: Large type / large print edition Dimensions: Width: 15.40cm , Height: 2.10cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.312kg ISBN: 9780062999085ISBN 10: 0062999087 Pages: 320 Publication Date: 07 July 2020 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsReviewsLydia Dugdale provides wise guidance, compelling stories, and fascinating historical background to help us rediscover the lost art of dying. She does so from the perspective of a caring physician, but also as a fellow pilgrim on the path of life. Everyone who lives will die someday, yet too few consider what it means to die well. This book can help to close that gap. It does so with style and grace.--Rita Ferrone, contributing writer and columnist, Commonweal magazine Lydia Dugdale provides wise guidance, compelling stories, and fascinating historical background to help us rediscover the lost art of dying. She does so from the perspective of a caring physician, but also as a fellow pilgrim on the path of life. Everyone who lives will die someday, yet too few consider what it means to die well. This book can help to close that gap. It does so with style and grace.--Rita Ferrone, contributing writer and columnist, Commonweal magazine Lydia Dugdale's The Lost Art of Dying proves that there is often nothing more relevant to our present cultural moment than the wisdom of the past--in this instance, on the subject of how to face death. The book is based on a great deal of painstaking scholarship but is written in the most accessible style. It will not only be of enormous help to people facing their own death or the death of a loved one, but also to professionals in various fields who attend the dying.--Timothy Keller, NYT Bestselling Author, Pastor Emeritus, Redeemer Presbyterian Church, New York City. One of the most avoided questions in life is also one of the most important: what is it like to die? It's a question we will all encounter, no matter what our beliefs about the afterlife. And you will find no more compassionate and knowledgeable guide than Dr. Dugdale, who has accompanied many people on this journey. Her new book is a great gift to all of us who will die or face death, which is to say, all of us. --James Martin, SJ, author of The Jesuit Guide and Jesus: A Pilgrimage Lydia Dugdale provides wise guidance, compelling stories, and fascinating historical background to help us rediscover the lost art of dying. She does so from the perspective of a caring physician, but also as a fellow pilgrim on the path of life. Everyone who lives will die someday, yet too few consider what it means to die well. This book can help to close that gap. It does so with style and grace.--Rita Ferrone, contributing writer and columnist, Commonweal magazine Lydia Dugdale's The Lost Art of Dying proves that there is often nothing more relevant to our present cultural moment than the wisdom of the past--in this instance, on the subject of how to face death. The book is based on a great deal of painstaking scholarship but is written in the most accessible style. It will not only be of enormous help to people facing their own death or the death of a loved one, but also to professionals in various fields who attend the dying.--Timothy Keller, NYT Bestselling Author, Pastor Emeritus, Redeemer Presbyterian Church, New York City. One of the most avoided questions in life is also one of the most important: what is it like to die? It's a question we will all encounter, no matter what our beliefs about the afterlife. And you will find no more compassionate and knowledgeable guide than Dr. Dugdale, who has accompanied many people on this journey. Her new book is a great gift to all of us who will die or face death, which is to say, all of us. --James Martin, SJ, author of The Jesuit Guide and Jesus: A Pilgrimage Who would have thought that a book on dying could be so enlivening? But that is precisely Dugdale's point: if we do not face our deaths, they destroy us before they have happened. A lucid, learned, humane, and utterly necessary book. --Christian Wiman, author of My Bright Abyss Want a better life? Then think about your death, starting with Lydia Dugdale's The Lost Art of Dying. Dugdale shows that death should be courageously confronted. In so doing, we not only conquer our fear, but also understand the reason for our lives. --Arthur C. Brooks, author of Love Your Enemies and professor at the Harvard Kennedy School Sensitive, informed by clinical experience, rich in the wisdom of the past, L. S. Dugdale has written a riveting book about life's hardest truth--death. A must read for all of us as we face our mortality. --R. R. Reno, editor of First Things Like Atul Gawande and Paul Kalanithi, Dugdale writes fluently about dying from clinical experience. What sets her book apart is that she writes wise words everyone needs to hear as they live. When I lay dying, I hope I will have a doctor like Dr. Dugdale at the bedside. --Abraham Nussbaum, MD, author of The Finest Traditions of My Calling Kudos to Dugdale's The Lost Art of Dying for being honest, refreshing, and useful. As a physician who has experienced many deaths, she helps us think about the meaning of our lives and about how to have a good death. I recommend this book to all who are mortal. --Mary Pipher, author of Women Rowing North In this profound and compassionate book about death and its nearness, Dugdale demystifies one of the essential mysteries of our time. --Siddhartha Mukherjee, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Emperor of All Maladies and The Gene In this important new book, Dugdale asks why it is so difficult for patients and families to accept terminal diagnoses and for all of us to recognize our finitude. The solution, Dugdale proposes, is for us to learn about dying now, as part of our living. And she is right. --Victoria Sweet, MD, PhD, author of God's Hotel and Slow Medicine In this extraordinary book Dugdale applies both her clinical experience and her deep insights into a centuries-old approach to help dying patients live well and die well. Although I was an early student of Elisabeth Kubler-Ross, Dugdale's book has provided me with new insights that I will apply immediately. --Dr. Mark Siegler, Lindy Bergman Distinguished Service Professor of Medicine and Surgery at the University of Chicago and coauthor of Clinical Ethics I'm adding this book about dying to my collection of treasured guides to living well. Filling me with illuminating, compelling, and consoling hope, this book, more than any other I have read, reveals how to rediscover the lost art of dying. Read it. Then read it again and again. --Raymond Barfield, MD, PhD, professor of pediatrics and Christian philosophy, Duke University Dugdale patiently and respectfully unveils the reality that many in our world die poorly. Drawing on Medieval wisdom on dying well, she teases out lessons for today. Anyone who deals with the dying--sooner or later, don't we all?--will profit enormously from this insightful and compassionate book. --D. A. Carson, author of Praying with Paul Dugdale examines how we have surrendered to the medical machine while surfacing ways we can regain control of key decisions over our quality of life and death. Everyone must read this book, whether you are a health-care professional, a public-policy official, or just hoping to reach an advanced age. --Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, Senior Associate Dean, Yale School of Management The Lost Art of Dying brilliantly combines medical experience and humanistic tradition to show not only how we should prepare for death and why we must, but also that it is an essential part of the art of living well. --James Rhodes, PhD, professor emeritus of Medieval Studies at Southern Connecticut State University Author InformationLYDIA DUGDALE MD, MAR, is associate professor of medicine and director of the Center for Clinical Medical Ethics at Columbia University. Prior to her 2019 move to Columbia, she was Associate Director of the Program for Biomedical Ethics and founding Co-Director of the Program for Medicine, Spirituality, and Religion at Yale School of Medicine. She is an internal medicine primary care doctor and medical ethicist. Her first book Dying in the Twenty-First Century (MIT Press, 2015) provides the theoretical grounding for this current book. She lives with her husband and daughters in New York City. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |