Six Months to Live: Learning from a Young Man with Cancer
By (Author) Daniel Hallock
Plough Publishing House
Plough Publishing House
1st July 2015
United States
General
Non Fiction
Christian life and practice
Religious aspects of sexuality, gender and relationships
Personal religious testimony and popular inspirational works
Paperback
154
Width 114mm, Height 203mm, Spine 11mm
181g
"I wouldn't trade my life for anyone else's. If I could choose not to have cancer, and continue my life as it was, I wouldn't do it." - Matt Gauger. You're twenty-two, in love, and just starting a career. The last thing you're worried about is the purpose of life (whatever that means) and when you're going to die. If you think about such things,
A little book, but a grand witness . . . Matts story reminds us that though dying is a gritty and painful process, death does not have the final word. --Gerald L. Sittser, author
An extraordinary account simple and profound. Matts struggle is one we will all eventually have to go through. --Francis S. MacNutt, author, Healing
It is a tragedy when a life is cut this short, though in being compressed it becomes like a diamond. Through the clarity of this prism we can see a life lived for God, and lived well. --Frederica Mathewes-Green, columnist
CompellingSix Months to Live captures the essence of dying with dignity and grace. I have never read a book about dying that left me with such a feeling of peace. --Judy Lentz, former CEO, Hospice and Palliative Nurses Association
Six Months to Live tears at the soul and leaves the reader determined to take a new directionIf you dont read another book this year, read this one. --The Oklahoman
Deep, fascinating, theologically rich --Christianity Today
Secularists often ask why the good die young, and sometimes very young. Daniel Hallocks Six Months to Live: Learning from a Young Man with Cancer is a good book to give those facing a death sentence. --Marvin Olasky, WORLD Magazine
PowerfulIt is rare to be invited on such and intimate journey. --N. Gordon Cosby, fouinder, Church of the Savior
Matt Gauger, the subject of this slim, poignant book, suddenly found himself dying of cancer at age 22. Hallock gives readers an intimate account of events, beginning with the robust, athletic young man's descent into unmanageable pain, followed by a serious diagnosis and months of reckoning with end-of-life issues. The text features long quotations from interviews with and diaries of those closest to Gauger among them his wife, parents, brother and doctor and in doing so paints the emotional, spiritual and physical landscape within which this drama unfolded. Hallock admirably avoids hagiography, as do Gauger's loved ones, and instead reveals the ennobling effect dying had on Gauger. --Publishers Weekly
Daniel Hallock, a Cornell graduate, is the author of two acclaimed volumes of war stories. Described by The Nation as part narrator and part reporter, with all skills polished, Hallock has drawn praise for his writing from the likes of Studs Terkel and Howard Zinn. This is his third book.