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About the Author

Marie De Hennezel is an esteemed psychologist and therapist and the author of ten books, including The Art of Growing Old. She lives in Paris
Image credit: Marie de Hennezel en 2016

Works by Marie de Hennezel

The Art of Growing Old: Aging with Grace (2008) 127 copies, 4 reviews
ART DE MOURIR (1997) 25 copies, 2 reviews
Nous ne nous sommes pas dit au revoir (2000) 17 copies, 1 review
Le souci de l'autre (2004) 11 copies, 1 review
Mourir les yeux ouverts (2005) 11 copies, 1 review
Sex and sixty (2015) 6 copies, 1 review
Croire aux forces de l'esprit (2018) 3 copies, 1 review

Associated Works

Tuesdays with Morrie: An Old Man, a Young Man, and Life's Greatest Lesson (1997) — some editions — 23,170 copies, 392 reviews
Michelin. Une aventure humaine (2019) — Preface — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1946-08-05
Gender
female
Occupations
psychologist
Nationality
France

Members

Reviews

21 reviews
Marie De Hennezel's The Art of Growing Old is a fascinating book geared towards older individuals. Much of the author's descriptions address how people can age gracefully. She doesn't refrain from giving the good and bad experiences of growing older. It's a work that challenges the beliefs that old age is mostly depressing and unhappy. It aims to build a reader's confidence that there's also joy and the growth of wisdom with older folk. True, as people age their bodies become less strong, show more but many continue to have sharp minds. Some describe their senior lives as opening new experiences to enjoy their freedom more fully. Through this reality, there's time to embrace nature, friends, and the environment with a renewed appreciation. These gifts lead many of the older generation to fully embrace life and prepare for a happy death. show less
I suspect the older the reader, the more they will get out of this book. Although it has some awkwardness due to being a translation, it presents an excellent message.
I suspect the older the reader, the more they will get out of this book. Although it has some awkwardness due to being a translation, it presents an excellent message.
An egotistical perspective on how to be humble. Interesting read with some good ideas, but not written in an enticing manner. Very choppy and hard to follow the thought pattern.

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Statistics

Works
29
Also by
2
Members
503
Popularity
#49,234
Rating
3.8
Reviews
21
ISBNs
88
Languages
9

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