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Dying Well

The Prospect for Growth at the End of Life

Paperback – ISBN 1-57322-05105
Riverhead Books – Penguin & Putnam Inc. | January 1997 | $15.00

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Readers Guide

In 1997, too many Americans were dying in hospitals, often in pain, often alone. Progress has been made in alleviating pain and expanding hospice and palliative care for people nearing the end of their lives. Yet, even today, too many people are dying badly! The stories in Dying Well enable readers to imagine that wellbeing is possible through these most difficult times of life. This book remains as vital and valuable to individuals and their families today as it did when it was first published.
  • Katy Butler
    I was death-naive before I read Dr. Ira Byock’s book, Dying Well when my father was in his early 80s and in his final, painful decline. It introduced me to the possibility that with appropriate support, dying did not have to be a chaotic, fear-ridden and painful experience. In fact, families could be well-supported and death could even be meaningful. I found it immensely reassuring, informative and helpful when I was beginning my research for Knocking on Heaven’s Door. Dying Well, since its first publication, has, opened a door in our culture and allowed people to stop pretending death doesn’t exist and instead explore the meaning and practices of good dying. We have so much further to go until we give all Americans a chance for a humane and sacred passage from life to death. Dr. Byock’s work has opened up many people, family by family, to options they didn’t know were possible.
    Katy Butler
    Knocking on Heaven’s Door and A Good End of Life
  • Karen Wyatt
  • Harvey Chochinov
  • Angelo Volandes
  • Ellen Goodman
  • Sensei Koshin Paley Ellison