Hi,
The day after you received my last newsletter, I lost a close family member.
After I got the news, I sat with other relatives for hours – especially my grandma, singing hymns and holding her hand. According to statistics for life expectancy in Nigeria, Mrs. K., as everyone calls my grandmother, should have passed on years before I was even born. In light of this – and the fact that she herself says regularly that she is ready to die – my steadily increasing fear of losing her seems extremely unreasonable. At 28, I don’t want to imagine a life without my 87-year-old grandma. She laughs when I tell her this.
Death is probably the most personal event in anyone’s life. Unlike birth, which is a shared experience for the mother and baby, sometimes for multiples like twins or quintuplets, there is no natural way to orchestrate a shared death. No matter how much we love someone – even if the intensity of our grief kills us – we cannot naturally share in their death. Nor would many of us want to.
As one contributor observed, many of us have an anticipatory fear of death that comes from our knowledge that we are needed. My grandmother’s lack of anticipatory fear probably comes from knowing she has done well in caring for her family and contributing to her society. My own fear of her death comes from having lost too many people while I still needed them.
Mrs. K. and I have grown quite close since my mother’s passing. She shares my iron will and sense of adventure, and she thoroughly enjoys swapping travel stories. My grandma jokes often that the only continent she hasn’t tried to set foot on is Antarctica. Every time I visit, she asks, “So where last? Or where next?” I regale her with anecdotes, laughing about cultural oddities that she insists haven’t changed in the thirty-odd years since her own visits to the places I am just now discovering.
I don’t tell her about things she might not have experienced, such as the endless struggle to obtain visas which have become prohibitively expensive in the decades since she stopped regularly traveling, or the times when I’ve been ‘randomly’ detained at airports. I consider it prudent to skip topics like the difficulties of traveling the world on an underprivileged passport – or the privilege inherent in being able to overcome the difficulties of such an underprivileged passport. With her, I want only lightness; I prefer to save the thorny conversations for those with whom I can reasonably hope to spend many, many more years.
The Other Shelf book club
When I launched The Other Shelf, I wasn’t quite sure what I expected. What I got, however, was an abundance of recommendations; scores of intriguing, exciting, even surprising contributions. Eighty-four books had made the list at my last count, with several recommended more than once. From them all, I selected Jason De León’s ‘ The Land of Open Graves: Living and Dying on the Migrant Trail ’.
For the next few weeks, we’ll be reading ‘The Land of Open Graves’ because it powerfully captures an idea I’ve been turning over in my mind: death as a deterrent, as a tool to regulate human behaviour, and a confirmation that certain lives – certain human beings – have little value.
Recommended by Vinh Nguyen, ‘The Land of Open Graves’ “focuses specifically on the Sonoran Desert in southern Arizona. [De León’s] main argument is that the desert is…‘a killing machine’ which is part of the [United States] government’s ‘Prevention through Deterrence’ program [which pushes people] to the incredibly hostile terrain of the Sonoran Desert. To illustrate the implications of this strategy, between January 2000 and September 2014, 2,771 bodies were found in this desert. And this figure includes only those who have been recovered; the actual number of dead is unknown.”
I realise that the book addresses a heavy subject; I hope some of you will be able to join me regardless. In the meantime, Mrs. K. and I will continue to comfort each other by discussing happy things such as where I should travel next, or whether it was a sensible idea to get my current manicure.
Reading recommendations
Below is the full list of all the books recommended so far for the ‘Death and Dying’ segment of The Other Shelf. The items in bold are the recommendations or contributions I was intrigued by, and those in bold italics intrigued me the most.
- The Yellow World - Albert Espinosa
- Ways of Dying - Zakes Mda
- Being Mortal - Atul Gawande (Recommended 6 times)
- The Year of Magical Thinking - Joan Didion (Recommended 3 times)
- The End of Your Life Book Club - Will Schwalbe
- Life and Death - Forrest Church
- Daytripper - Fábio Moon and Gabriel Bá (a graphic novel)
- The Five Invitations - Frank Ostaseski
- The Road - Cormac McCarthy
- The Great Divorce - C.S. Lewis
- Resisting Elegy - Joel Peckham
- Love’s Work: A Reckoning with Life - Gillian Rose
- Sum: Forty Tales from the Afterlives - David Eagleman (Recommended twice)
- The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying - Sogyal Rimpoche (Recommended twice)
- The Famished Road - Ben Okri
- Memoirs of Hadrian - Marguerite Yourcenar
- Two Part Invention - Madeline L’Engle
- Angle of Repose - Wallace Stegner
- The Namesake - Jhumpa Lahiri
- Disobedience - Naomi Alderman
- The Lowland - Jhumpa Lahiri
- The Death of Ivan Ilyich - Leo Tolstoy (Recommended twice)
- A Better Death: Conversations About the Art of Living and Dying well - Dr Ranjana Srivastava
- Die Wise - Stephen Jenkinson (Recommended twice)
- The Earthsea Cycle - Ursula K. Le Guin (a series)
- The Art of Dying Well - Katy Butler
- House of God - Samuel Shem
- The Death Of Santini: The Story of a Father and His Son - Pat Conroy
- Lonely City - Olivia Laing
- The Denial of Death - Ernest Becker
- When Death Takes Something From You Give It Back - Naja Marie Aidt
- Unnatural Causes - R. Shephard MD
- Words at the Threshold - Lisa Smartt
- Death and Dying - Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, M.D
- The Undertaking - Thomas Lynch
- The Ultimate Journey - Stanislav Grof
- The Rules Do Not Apply - Ariel Levy
- Four Minus Three - Barbara Pachl-Eberhart
- Grief is the Thing with Feathers - Max Porter (Recommended 3 times)
- Knocking on Heaven’s Door - Katy Butler
- Too Soon To Say Goodbye - Art Buchwald
- Last Rights - Stephen Kiernan
- When Breath Becomes Air - Paul Kalanithi (Recommended 8 times)
- Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont - Elizabeth Taylor
- Immortality - Milan Kundera
- The Land of Open Graves - Jason De León
- The Death Of Forever: A New Future For Human Consciousness - Darryl Reanney
- Mortality - Christopher Hitchens
- Buddhism Without Beliefs - Stephen Batchelor (only one chapter on death)
- A Widow’s Story - Joyce Carol Oates
- Mort - Terry Pratchett
- Reaper Man - Terry Pratchett (Recommended twice)
- Evidence of the Afterlife - Jeffrey Long M.D
- A Man Called Ove - Fredrik Backman
- A Grief Observed - C.S. Lewis
- The Book Thief - Marcus Zusak
- Clock Without Hands - Carson McCullers
- The Brothers Lionheart - Astrid Lindgren
- Mind of the Cells - Satprem
- Adventures of consciousness - Satprem
- The Outsiders - S.E. Hinton
- The Five People You Meet in Heaven - Mitch Albom
- Tuesdays with Morrie - Mitch Albom
- Minerva’s Owl: The Bereavement Phase of My Marriage - Carol Matthews
- The Diving Bell and the Butterfly - Jean-Dominique Bauby (Recommended 3 times)
- Essays After Eighty - Donald Hall
- ‘Will the Circle be Unbroken?: Reflections on Death and Dignity’ - Studs Terkel
- No Death, No Fear: Comforting Wisdom for Life - Thich Nhat Hanh
- Lincoln in the Bardo - George Saunders
- The Dark Flood Rises - Margaret Drabble
- Mystic’s Musings - Sadhguru
- The Gentle Art of Swedish Death-Cleaning - Margareta Magnusson
- Pedro Paramo - Juan Rulfo
- Nothing to Be Frightened Of - Julian Barnes
- Dancing on the Grave. Encounters with Death - Nigel Barley
- From Here to Eternity: Traveling the World to Find the Good Death - Caitlin Doughty
- Somewhere Towards the End - Diana Athill
- Charlotte’s Web - E.B. White
- The Loved One - Evelyn Waugh
- The Boy Who Saw True - Cyril Scott
- Dying To Be Me - Anita Moorjani
- Swing Low - Miriam Toews
- Lifespan: Why We Age and Why We Don’t Have To - David A. Sinclair, Ph.D. with Matthew D. LaPlante
- The Forest of Souls - Carla Banks