Ours is a death-denying society. But death is inevitable, and we must
face the question of how to deal with it. Coming to terms with our own
finiteness helps us discover life's true meaning.
Why do we treat death as a taboo? What are the sources of our fears? How
do we express our grief, and how do we accept the death of a person
close to us? How can we prepare for our own death?
Drawing on our own and other cultures' views of death and dying,
Elisabeth Kübler-Ross provides some illuminating answers to these and
other questions. She offers a spectrum of viewpoints, including those of
ministers, rabbis, doctors, nurses, and sociologists, and the personal
accounts of those near death and of their survivors.
Once we come to terms with death as a part of human development, the
author shows, death can provide us with a key to the meaning of human
existence.