What do you think?
Rate this book


231 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 2009
A strange book. Part statistical, part biographical, part polite and overall unbiased reconnaissance of spiritual beliefs, part tourist guide. An interesting reading to give yourself a paradigm on how we deal with death, it says what people do, how it can go wrong and mostly how the people that handle it better manage to do so. It's not a self help book, and as the author says you should probably avoid this and any other book on dealing with death up to 4-6 months from a traumatic event, but it's easy to compare it to your own experience.
Some parts are slow, but I liked how describing Hiroshima and the author's personal story about the loss of his father made things more interesting.
The author uses real life examples from people he interviewed and at some point it can be confusing, if you don't remember who was who, but you'll appreciate how later on he makes an effort to give some qualifiers along the names so it's easier to recall their back story.