• Being Mortal

    Being Mortal

    Gawande, Atul

    Nonfiction. Gawande presents problems and potential solutions to the question of how we can best address our mortality. Through stories and research he shows that we are shifting from a highly medicalized end of life to an experience in which we can have some sort of meaning. Surgeon, writer, and public health researcher Gawande asks how we can live out our later years in the way we desire and how best to talk to our health-care providers to achieve that. (Library Journal)

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  • Woman at 1,000 Degrees

    Woman at 1,000 Degrees

    Hallgrímur Helgason

    Fiction. Helgason's sad and funny novel begins in 2009, as 80-year-old Herra Björnsson lies dying in a Reykavík garage, still in possession of a live hand grenade from World War II. Her limited activities of late include corresponding under a false identity with an Australian bodybuilder, arranging her own cremation, smoking, and recalling her eventful past. (Library Journal)

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  • The Half Known Life

    The Half Known Life

    Iyer, Pico

    Nonfiction. Essayist and novelist Iyer presents this thoughtful exploration of the concepts of paradise, and whether anything resembling it can be found in the earthly realm. (Library Journal)

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  • The Tibetan Book of the Dead for Beginners

    The Tibetan Book of the Dead for Beginners

    Lama Lhanang, Rinpoche

    Nonfiction. (A) slim but insightful take on the classic Buddhist text on dying well. Composed in the eighth century by Buddhist master Padmasambhava, The Tibetan Book of the Dead addresses end-of-life concerns but can prove inaccessible to the non-Buddhist. In this entry, the authors spotlight its central principles and recast them for a broader audience. (Publishers Weekly)

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  • Tell Me How This Ends

    Tell Me How This Ends

    Leevers, Jo

    Fiction. Two lonely women form a tender bond in this melancholy yet hopeful debut. Henrietta Lockwood feels like she has failed. Having been let go from several jobs, she is now struggling to find something new. When she comes across an ad for the Life Story project, an organization that helps terminal patients write books reflecting on their lives, she applies, not realizing the position will change her forever. (Publisher description)

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  • And Finally

    And Finally

    Marsh, Henry

    Nonfiction. Author of the New York Times best-selling Do No Harm, which won the PEN Ackerley Prize and was short-listed for many other honors, retired neurosurgeon Marsh got a different take on the medical world when he was diagnosed with advanced cancer. Here he meditates on the move from doctor to patient, the challenges of illness and aging, and the beauties of family and science. (Library Journal)

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  • A Beginner's Guide to the End

    A Beginner's Guide to the End

    Miller, Bruce J.

    Nonfiction. A clear-eyed and big-hearted action plan for approaching the end of life, written to help readers feel more in control of an experience that so often seems anything but. (Publisher description)

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  • Tell Me Good Things

    Tell Me Good Things

    Runcie, James

    Nonfiction. In this startling and intimate memoir of life before death and love after grief, the internationally best-selling author tells the story of his wife's battle with Lou Gehrig's disease and her death, while celebrating her life, in all its color, humor, and brightness. (Publisher description)

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  • Gratitude

    Gratitude

    Sacks, Oliver

    Nonfiction. No writer has succeeded in capturing the medical and human drama of illness as honestly and as eloquently as Oliver Sacks. During the last few months of his life, he wrote a set of essays in which he movingly explored his feelings about completing a life and coming to terms with his own death. (Publisher description)

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  • These Vital Signs

    These Vital Signs

    Tabatabai, Sayed

    Nonfiction. A doctor reflects on his profession and his experience with patients in this brilliant essay collection that expands on his wildly popular Twitter poems. In medicine, every patient presents with a story. "Once upon a time I was well, and then..." These patient narratives are the beating heart of medicine; through stories we strive to communicate, to understand, to empathize, and perhaps find healing. (Publisher description)

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