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Swimming in a Sea of Death

Swimming in a Sea of Death
A Son's Memoir  
This edition: eBook, 364 pages
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Description

Both a memoir and an investigation, Swimming in a Sea of Death is David Rieff's loving tribute to his mother, the writer Susan Sontag, and her final battle with cancer. Rieff's brave, passionate, and unsparing witness of the last nine months of her life, from her initial diagnosis to her death, is both an intensely personal portrait of the relationship between a mother and a son, and a reflection on what it is like to try to help someone gravely ill in her fight to go on living and, when the time comes, to die with dignity.

Rieff offers no easy answers. Instead, his intensely personal book is a meditation on what it means to confront death in our culture. In his most profound work, this brilliant writer confronts the blunt feelings of the survivor -- the guilt, the self-questioning, the sense of not having done enough.

And he tries to understand what it means to desire so desperately, as his mother did to the end of her life, to try almost anything in order to go on living.

Drawing on his mother's heroic struggle, paying tribute to her doctors' ingenuity and faithfulness, and determined to tell what happened to them all, Swimming in a Sea of Death subtly draws wider lessons that will be of value to others when they find themselves in the same situation.

"Susan Sontag was fiercely, exuberantly alive, and uncompromising in her life no less than her work. David Rieff's fine, tender, and unflinching portrait of her final illness brings home her absolute determination to survive to the last -- to survive against the odds and live creatively despite a devastating disease and an unproven cancer treatment. At once a report from the frontlines of experimental oncology and a moving, absorbing personal account of his mother's last illness, Swimming in a Sea of Death is a courageous and darkly beautiful book."
-- Oliver Sacks
Guardian.co.uk, August 19, 2011
...a publisher's menu. It's an eat-all-you-can affair: since Didion we have had, to name a few, David Rieff's Swimming in a Sea of Death , (about his mother, Susan Sontag), Anne Roiphe 's Epilogue , and Roland Barthes's posthumous Mourning ...
Guardian Unlimited, May 1, 2009
...December 2004, written by her son, is that 'she died as she had lived: unreconciled to mortality'. As David Rieff points out, his mother's fierce desire for more time to write was a major factor in her refusal of death. This finely nuanced ...
Guardian Unlimited, January 3, 2009
...him (David, editor of these diaries, author of last year's account of his mother's final illness, Swimming in a Sea of Death Husband and wife begin writing a book on Freud together, but she jumps ship, ostensibly to do postgrad at Oxford ...