Voices of Death"...Writing...stimulated by series of incidents...several hundred suicide notes...filed away...in the vaults of the coroner's office in Los Angeles; a young woman at a symposium...[later sent] tapes describing her life and her immolation; a diary of a thirty-year old doctor who died of leukemia; pamphlets obtained from Auschwitz written by camp victims...[author's] goals: to share with the reader what I know about death and death documents and the theories I have developed about the psychology of suicide, terminal illness and execution; and, at other times, to stand back out of the way so that the reader may have direct contact with the documents themselves; and finally, to show how the different kinds of life-threatening situations are similar to each other and how each is separate to itself..."--preface. |
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Contents
The Rutters of Death | 1 |
Reflections of Fortuitous | 9 |
Suicide Notes and Tragic Lives | 41 |
Copyright | |
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Arthur Koestler asked behavior believe Boris Pasternak called cancer Chad Varah Clementis commit suicide conscious constriction Copyright course crying dead dear death Depression died doll dying person Dying We Live emotional everything Excerpt father fear feel felt friends going grief guilty Hans Zinsser happened happy Helmut Gollwitzer Herman Melville hospital human Humphrey hurt husband illness John Hinton Jory Graham killed Kim Malthe-Bruun kind knew letters leukemia Lida life-threatening look mean Midwife Toad mind Moby Dick mother mourning murder never night one's pain parents patient personal documents premourning psychological Quentin Bell Random House reaction remember Reprinted by permission Robertson Davies rutters seems self-mourning sense session Shneidman someone suicidal act suicide notes survivors talk tell thanatology therapist things thought tion told understand walk woman words write written wrote York young