The author spent six to eight hours a day with Krishnamurti from the end of May 1985 until Krishnamurti’s death in February 1986. This was a time of such seismic changes in the Krishnamurti organizations in America, England, Switzerland, and India, that the author, who was thirty-seven years old at the time, kept detailed notes. At the request of Krishnamurti’s official biographer, Mary Lutyens, the author assembled his notes and lent them to her for the final volume of her biography of Krishnamurti. She encouraged the author to publish his assemblage, and advised him “not to change a word.” Thirty-one years later, the author set out to do that. However, over the intervening decades, the author found he had additional things to write regarding this extraordinary time in his life, and he does so with footnotes and appendices to preserve the original material. Consequently, this book uniquely shows the last nine months of Krishnamurti’s life through the eyes of Scott H. Forbes at both thirty-seven and sixty-eight years of age.
One of the most beautiful books I've had the pleasure to read. The closest many of us will come to experiencing life with Krishnamurti, Scott Forbes has done a beautiful job in transmitting what it was like, without resorting to any dramatics. It's written exactly how it should have been, and tells us like it was. If you have read Krishnamurti's books hopefully like me, it will help put things into context and allow you to connect to them on a deeper level.