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Explore the emotional, cultural, and practical aspects of life with stories filled with wonder, compassion and wisdom.

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Dr. Mannix, a palliative care specialist, reflects on "ordinary dying" in her writing, aiming to help others understand the process and approach it with compassion, while balancing joy and grief.

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Sorrow’s Edge

Francis Weller emphasizes grief's need to be witnessed. As a therapist for 40 years, he believes grief connects all stories. He advocates for embracing all emotions and living fully, with reverence.

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Grieving Brain

In The Grieving Brain, neuroscientist Mary-Frances O’Connor explains grief’s impact on the brain, offering insights into its process. Her research bridges science and personal experience to better understand loss.

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Five Invitations

Frank Ostaseski, author of The Five Invitations, aims to help people live fully by embracing life’s fragility. He encourages living in the present and highlights wisdom from those nearing death. His ideal death is one where he can fully embrace the moment.

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Start Now

Diane Rehm’s When My Time Comes advocates for compassionate choice in end-of-life care, sharing personal experiences with suffering, loss, and the importance of conversations about death and wishes for dying.

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Death Anxiety

Erica Buist, after a traumatic encounter with death, became fascinated with death anxiety. She advocates for normalizing conversations about death to alleviate fear, drawing on personal experiences and research.

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Heaven's Door

William Peters, founder of the Shared Crossings Project, wrote At Heaven’s Door to normalize extraordinary end-of-life experiences. He advocates for a conscious, connected, and loving approach to death.

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A Lost Art

Lydia Dugdale’s The Lost Art of Dying emphasizes that to die well, one must live well, urging readers to prepare for death by reconciling relationships, considering medical choices, and engaging with life's ultimate questions.

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Wholehearted

Sensei Koshin Paley Ellison’s Wholehearted highlights the transformative power of compassion and shared suffering in end-of-life care. Raised amidst the AIDS pandemic, he emphasizes commitment and connection, encouraging readers to embrace moments of happiness.

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Finish Strong

Barbara Coombs Lee, author of Finish Strong, emphasizes the importance of embracing our mortality to enrich life. Her exit plan involves having time to communicate with loved ones before her passing, though she is content with how her life has unfolded.

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Pet Loss

Stephanie Lucianovic wrote The End of Something Wonderful to help children process pet loss, aiming to make conversations about death less scary and more accessible. She values kindness and self-awareness.

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Medicinal

Nancy Slonim Aronie's "Memoir as Medicine" encourages others to uncover their stories, with a focus on healing through writing. In a candid interview, she reflects on love, death, and the importance of relationships. She shares her grief over the loss of her son and expresses a peaceful view on death, highlighting love as the essential lesson. Her ideal last day would be balanced, and she imagines returning as a country music star. Aronie's wisdom and humor make her insights both liberating and inspirational.

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Heartwood

Barbara Becker's Heartwood explores the intersection of life and death, inspired by her journey through a friend's terminal illness and the lessons on living fully in the face of mortality. It encourages embracing death as a teacher to live with heightened awareness.

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Funeral Friends

Alix Strauss' The Joy of Funerals, newly reissued after 20 years, explores the culture's readiness to discuss loss and loneliness. Strauss reflects on funerals as a means of connection and belonging.

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Make Meaning

Alexandra Vassilaros uses writing workshops, born from her personal experience with grief, to help others navigate loss. Her Make Meaning Workshop emphasizes that grief can lead to grace, love, and transformation.

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Love Notes

Love Notes to Grievers by Angela Morris offers solace to those dealing with loss, reflecting on grief's depth and beauty. Morris shares how writing about death helps her stay present and connected to others.

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At the Bedside

Barbara Karnes, a hospice pioneer, wrote about end-of-life care to help families understand the dying process. Her work focuses on simplifying death-related conversations and honoring its sacredness.

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Dying Prepared

Dying Prepared features Francesca Arnoldy, a community doula and death literacy educator, sharing insights on navigating mortality, preparing for death, and the importance of compassion and human connection.

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