Swimming In A Sea Of Death: A Son's Memoir
By (Author) David Rieff
Melbourne University Press
Melbourne University Press
1st May 2008
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Coping with / advice about illness and specific health conditions
616.99
Paperback
192
Width 139mm, Height 209mm, Spine 21mm
208g
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 is both an intensely personal portrait of the relationship between a mother and a son, and a reflection on what it means to confront death in our culture. David Rieff confronts his feelings in relation to his mother-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, and to try almost anything in order to go on living.
David Rieff is a contributing writer to The New York Times Magazine. He is the author of seven previous books, including the acclaimed At the Point of a Gun- Democratic Dreams and Armed Intervention; A Bed for the Night- Humanitarianism in Crisis; and Slaughterhouse- Bosnia and the Failure of the West. He lives in New York City.