A Very Easy Death
Simone de Beauvoir, Ali Smith, Patrick O'Brian
£10.99
Description
Long considered one of Simone de Beauvoir’s masterpieces, A Very Easy Death is a profoundly affecting, day-by-day recounting of her mother’s final days after she is hospitalized following a fall. Though a devout Catholic, her faith is subsumed by her terror of death, and as her body fails, she clings to life with fierce, primal desperation. In depicting her mother’s refusal to ‘go gentle’ while her autonomy and dignity are taken from her, Simone de Beauvoir ‘shows the power of compassion when it is allied with acute intelligence’ (Sunday Telegraph). Powerful, touching and sometimes shocking, this is an end-of-life account that no reader is likely to forget.
Publisher Review
'True and deeply moving.' - Annie Ernaux, winner of the 2022 Nobel Prize for Literature 'The mother of 20th-century feminism.' - Joanna Biggs, London Review of Books 'In every decade of my life since my 20s, I have been awed, confused, intrigued and inspired by Simone de Beauvoir's attempt to live with meaning, pleasure and purpose.' - Deborah Levy, author of Real Estate 'It was Alice Walker, Helene Cixous, Angela Davis, Virginia Woolf, George Eliot, and Simone Weil and de Beauvoir who mattered most to me.' - Zadie Smith, author of NW 'Nowhere is de Beauvoir's rigorous honesty more visible than in this haunting account of the death of her mother... As she charts her last weeks and her abasement at the hands of doctors and illness, both hostility and unexpected love play themselves out on the page.' - Lisa Appignanesi, author of Everyday Madness 'It would be hard to think that Simone de Beauvoir who flaunted so many strictures of life, would accept death.... And the intention of this memoir, which is in part a requiem and in part an exorcism, is its disturbing, defiant insistence on the fact that this can only be an utterly lonely experience.' - Kirkus 'Beauvoir's graciously written memoirs carry distinct appeal in recording the emotional and intellectual birth pangs of a fascinating woman.' - Time 'This book is written with restrained emotion and a literalness, a faithfulness to fact, that is very moving coming from a woman whom we have known as dedicated to abstractions. ... it illustrates the general tragedy of the human condition through a particularized instance. A book of near despair, yet dignified. - Library Journal
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