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The End of Your Life Book Club (edition 2012)

by Will Schwalbe

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5927115,185 (4.02)112
Member:Donna828
Title:The End of Your Life Book Club
Authors:Will Schwalbe
Info:Knopf (2012), Edition: 1, Hardcover, 352 pages
Collections:TIOLI Challenge - 2012, Your library
Rating:*****
Tags:Book about books, Cancer, 12/2012

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The End of Your Life Book Club by Will Schwalbe

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What a beautiful tribute to a powerful woman. The author and his mother decide to have a two person book club and read together an astonishing number of books during the end stages of his mother's life. She had lived a remarkable, inspiring life and her son captures much of her life in these pages- but it is the depth of her passion for helping people through the medium of books that held power for me. It reminded me of my father's passions and my reading to him when he was no longer able. I found a neat symmetry in the fact that my father's last book- the Kite Runner- was set in Afghanistan and her biggest passion was getting a library built in Afghanistan. ( )
  HelenGress | May 12, 2013 |
It’s no surprise Mary Anne Schwalbe is going to die at the end of this book. And Mary Anne would know, since she always reads the end first.

Will Schwalbe, a book editor, had always been close to his mother but a diagnosis of pancreatic cancer and the resulting doctor visits and chemo treatments provided mother and son with a lot of time spent together. Why not read to pass the time? They read books with themes of death, survival (Mary Anne was active in the plight of refugees around the world), and how to live. Will recounts his mom’s journey, using the books they read as signposts. Sometimes the stories are indicative and pertinent to what Mary Anne was thinking or feeling - other times, they simply enjoy the pleasure and new thoughts that reading offers.

The Schwalbes are well off and Mary Anne has excellent health care but she never ceases to realize her good fortune or to worry about those who are forced to go without adequate treatment. She also claims she is not brave but her courage and her determination to continue to be a positive force in the world, even while mired in her own understated pain and fear, are obvious. She works tirelessly on building a library in Afghanistan, almost to her last day.

Will struggles with the steps of the end-of-life dance. The outlook for pancreatic cancer is bleak but Mary Anne beats the odds. There will be no cure but there may be more time - time to spend with her grandchildren; time to impart the wisdom learned of her travels in the world - both physically and through reading books; time to be fully present until she decides to stop fighting. Her faith in God and everlasting life is a comfort she wishes her son shared. But they are both adamant about the vital importance of reading and sharing books. In the books she loved and in the books she never got a chance to read but would have loved, Will finds a way to share his mom with others. ( )
  bookappeal | May 12, 2013 |
Great book and it gave me a lot to think about. ( )
  PandoraKnits | May 10, 2013 |
This book is borne of a lovely concept, and it is clear that Mr. Schwalbe truly loved his most unusual and admirable mother. Perhaps he loved her too much to write an interesting book about her. She is revealed as almost Christ-like, but decidedly not human, in her generosity, forbearance and wisdom. The author revealed nothing that made his mother's story really interesting. I don't doubt that there is an interesting story to be told. Marianne Schwalbe's life was one well-lived and I want to hear more about it at some point, but this telling reveals only the surface and often feels inauthentic. The discussion of the books read is so brief it is not worth talking about that aspect of the book. I gave 2 stars because I am not made of stone. I appreciate a loving portrait of a man's mother and understand his grief, but at the end of the day I thought of this book what Willoughby thought of Colonel Brandon (Sense and Sensibility) it is the sort of book "everybody speaks well of and nobody cares about; whom all are delighted to see and nobody remembers to talk to." In other words, honorable, decent, boring. ( )
4 vote Narshkite | May 6, 2013 |
I’m sure that Mary Anne was a wonderful mother and dedicated humanitarian. I know that Will was a loving and devoted son. Hmmm, yep, that’s about it. Will might be a great son, but as a memoir writer, he leaves a lot to be desired. I never really connected with either him or his mother. The blurb on the book jacket said that when the two of them read, they weren’t a well person and a sick person, but a mother and son. But throughout the book (and it wasn’t on every page, but it sure seemed that way after a while), Will kept saying that Mom is dying but she isn’t dead yet. I didn’t need that reminder! If this was supposed to be a book about books shared, then it fell short there, too. While he listed many books and authors, not much was said about most of them, nor were we privy to much of Mary Anne’s or Will’s opinions of the books, except for a special few. This book often referred to things that Mary Anne did in the vaguest way possible, as she visited “some African country.” I’m sure that writing this book helped Will cope with his grief from losing his mother, but he failed to make me understand how starting a book club to cope with her illness and death was any different from others who have had to cope with losing a loved one. Many people read books and talk about them, and they don’t wait until one is dying to do so. Am I to believe that in his family of readers, this is something new? And with all his mother’s accomplishments, books were all that were left to remember and discuss? I know Mary Anne live and died, but I have felt sadder over the death of a fictional character than I did over this real person. And that is sad. ( )
3 vote Maydacat | May 5, 2013 |
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Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0307594033, Hardcover)

Amazon Best Books of the Month, October 2012: Tissues at the ready, I braced myself for The End of Your Life Book Club, Will Schwalbe’s memoir of his mother’s death from pancreatic cancer. But Mary Anne Schwalbe is such a fierce, unsentimental heroine--and her son such a frank and funny storyteller--that what could have been an emotional roller coaster turns out to be a beautifully paced ride. Mary Anne loves a good book as ardently as she loves her kids and her causes, chief among them a campaign to build a library in Afghanistan. When her health starts to fail, Will joins her for hospital appointments. They wait, they talk, and they read together--everything they’ve ever wanted to discuss. As much an homage to literature as to the mother who shared it with him, Will’s chronicle of this heartrending time opens up his captivating family to the rest of us. We should all be so lucky as to read along with the Schwalbes. --Mia Lipman

Amazon Exclusive: An Essay by Will Schwalbe

Will Schwalbe

For twenty-one years I worked in book publishing, mostly in editorial, acquiring the rights to manuscripts, working with authors to help shape their works, and trying to convince the world to pay attention to the various, wonderful books we were publishing. I learned from some of the all time great editors and publishers. But part of my publishing education went way, way back – to before I could read a word myself.

When I was a young child, before I went to sleep, my mother, like so many parents, would read me a book. My brother, eighteen months older, got his own book read to him. Later, my sister, four years younger, would have her own.

My mother was a working mother (a phrase she always disliked, as she rightly pointed out that no one talks of “working fathers”), so she wasn’t always home at night. She sometimes worked late, and she travelled for business, and, even when she and my dad were in town, they occasionally were out for dinner. But if she was home, she read us each a book before bed.

My early favorites included The Story of Ferdinand by Munro Leaf and Harold and Purple Crayon by Crockett Johnson. I loved that there was a bull who liked to smell flowers and wouldn’t fight, and I was amazed by the boy who could draw himself out of any jam. But the experience was far more than the books themselves. First, there was the comfort and security of being tucked into bed. (Is it coincidence that we use the phrase “tuck into” before three of my favorite things: food, bed, and good books, or is it because the pleasures of each have so much in common?) Then, there was the happy, selfish knowledge that, when it was my turn, I would be able to monopolize my mother’s attention just by sitting and listening.

But what I remember most is the way Mom made us feel that she was sharing something she loved with us, not completing a chore or performing a ritual. (Though I’m sure there were many nights when she was exhausted and would have loved to be in bed herself and fast asleep.) And when we shared the books, we also shared discussions about them. Why didn’t the men understand that Ferdinand just didn’t want to fight? There’s no one answer, but it’s a question Mom and I explored together time and again.

Later, I would start to read to myself of course. But it was the nightly reading with Mom that helped me become a reader – and probably pushed me toward the career in book publishing. From Mom, I learned that there’s a public pleasure in books as well as a private one; that sharing books you love and getting others to read them can create a powerful bond, not just between a parent and child, but among thousands or millions of strangers.

(retrieved from Amazon Wed, 02 Jan 2013 15:08:31 -0500)

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The inspiring story of a son and his dying mother, who form a "book club" that brings them together as her life comes to a close.

(summary from another edition)

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