Renowned Harvard scholar and New Yorker staff writer Jill Lepore has
composed a strikingly original, ingeniously conceived, and beautifully
crafted history of American ideas about life and death from before the
cradle to beyond the grave.
How does life begin? What does it mean? What happens when we die? "All
anyone can do is ask," Lepore writes. "That's why any history of ideas
about life and death has to be, like this book, a history of curiosity."
Lepore starts that history with the story of a seventeenth-century
Englishman who had the idea that all life begins with an egg and ends it
with an American who, in the 1970s, began freezing the dead. In between,
life got longer, the stages of life multiplied, and matters of life and
death moved from the library to the laboratory, from the humanities to
the sciences. Lately, debates about life and death have determined the
course of American politics. Each of these debates has a history.
Investigating the surprising origins of the stuff of everyday life--from
board games to breast pumps--Lepore argues that the age of discovery,
Darwin, and the space age turned ideas about life on earth topsy-turvy.
"New worlds were found," she writes, and "old paradises were lost." As
much a meditation on the present as an excavation of the past, The
Mansion of Happiness is delightful, learned, and altogether beguiling.