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Book Reviews of When Breath Becomes Air

When Breath Becomes Air
When Breath Becomes Air
Author: Paul Kalanithi
ISBN-13: 9780812988406
ISBN-10: 081298840X
Publication Date: 1/19/2016
Pages: 256
Rating:
  • Currently 4.1/5 Stars.
 81

4.1 stars, based on 81 ratings
Publisher: Random House
Book Type: Hardcover
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

9 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed When Breath Becomes Air on + 175 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
5.0 out of 5 stars -- I do not usually read memoirs or nonfiction but I was drawn to this because the forward was written by Abraham Verghese, the author of one of my favorite books of all time -- CUTTING FOR STONE.

Ostensibly, the book is about the life of Dr. Paul Kalanithi, a young man who is in the last year of his neurosurgery residency when he is diagnosed with lung cancer. We know at the outset that he has recently died, leaving behind a wife and an 8-month-old baby girl. But the true nature of his writing is the underlying theme -- Why are we here -- what is the purpose of life.

The book is not maudlin or dramatic, and it's not for everyone. There's a lot of medical detail and literature references that some might find pretentious or overwhelming. After all, Paul initially majored in Literature before he was called to become a physician and surgeon. The reader learns of Paul's early years, growing up in Arizona, and about his education and training in his young adulthood. Then it shifts to his changed circumstances and his treatment after being diagnosed. We see glimpses into his personal life and hear about his closeness to his family, colleagues and friends. What the book most definitely not is a roadmap, nor a guide of how to navigate a terminal illness -- it's not a story of how he found religion, and it definitely does not provide THE ANSWER.

I feel that the mark of a really great book is when it makes me think. When it causes me to pause for periods of intense self-reflection. I do not want to live an unexamined life. I read this over the course of a couple of hours and had to take a break just to reflect on some of Paul's personal insights. These were his thoughts, his reactions, his decisions. What would mine be, given my own life situations. It made me wish that this poetic soul had received the gift of more time. I came away from this reading experience humbled by his story. I would like to think I will go gently and courageously, not screaming WHY ME -- but none of us knows until it happens. Can a person prepare for death, really?

I'd recommend this for the beautiful prose and for giving the opportunity to see what one man did and said and thought during the last months of his life. How would I like to be remembered...what will I leave behind.

Thank you to NetGalley for the e-book ARC to review.
reviewed When Breath Becomes Air on + 1452 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
So much to ponder! This young doctor (in his thirties) is just finishing his residency when he realizes that he has cancer. The symptoms have been with him for some time but his busy work keeps him so occupied that he doesn't realize what is happening. When he does, he knows full well that his time in this world is limited. As he becomes a very sick patient the illness brings him and his wife closer together. They decide that the time to begin their family is now. And, Paul lives to hold their cherished child. What more could he ask for in this situation?

Some might say this book is about dying but Paul's wife, Lucy, helps us understand that it is about living. Paul was obsessed with being not only a good neurosurgeon/neuroscientist but also a compassionate and understanding physician. I read some of other reviews and I beg to differ with the negative comments. A talented writer, this man was dying and wanted to leave a legacy for living. Living a good life means helping and understanding others. Living a good life means making the most of the time you have to do just that. I'm so glad that I read this wonderful biography. And, I find myself wondering could I live a life as filled as Paul's was?
reviewed When Breath Becomes Air on + 329 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This was a sad but heartwarming book about a young doctor diagnosed with lung cancer. It is a story about his hopes and dreams and his battle with this awful disease. Well written and a truly remarkable young man..
njmom3 avatar reviewed When Breath Becomes Air on + 1389 more book reviews
When Breath Becomes Air by Paul Kalanithi are the words of a physician taking a philosophical look at his own profession and the words of a young man brought face to face with his own mortality. What can I possibly say about a book that comprises the final words of a dying man? My recommendation - Read it, and then perhaps read it again. It will leave you changed.

Read my complete review at: http://www.memoriesfrombooks.com/2016/02/when-breath-becomes-air.html

Reviewed based on a publisher's galley received through NetGalley
Minehava avatar reviewed When Breath Becomes Air on + 829 more book reviews
This is a quiet but worthy book reflecting one mans life. Not great not bad. Just life lived well in service of others. He is not an easy man, as he has chosen a difficult path in life most people wouldn't be able to follow. It takes a special kind of mixture of cocky tough and determination to be one of the best brain specialist and to decide when to let a person die in dignity rather then to save the body and have an empty shell to maintain (and to pay debilitating hospice bills). He is faced with his own humanity and despite saving his marriage he looses his fight with Cancer ad dies. His book is actually full of examples of life and death from his medical training days, and how it impacted him. How he became numb to human suffering, as a necessary protective Shield not to go insane. And how his brush with death returned his humanity.

We often forget that our doctor are burning up at alarming rate. Medical error is the 3rd highest death cause in USA. It is often impossible to get an appointment within 4monts period. But we do not take in to account the toxic workspace the Dr have to work under. That the amount of paperwork is 50% of time put in for the Dr. Dr are often the loneliest people and 60%more likely co commit suicide. We as patients dont really see the other side of the equation. In this book we do get a glimpse, and it is a reality check. Again it is not bad, or good. He just writes as things are. No judgment from him. But as a reader you can definitely see that there are issues in this broken healthcare system.
plum-marie avatar reviewed When Breath Becomes Air on + 117 more book reviews
I read this at a time when family and friends are dealing with these life changing moments. One facing death from cancer, another the effects of a brain tumor, another died the day after we were with him at hospice. So in a way it was good timing for me to read of a doctor turned patient the day of a funeral. I sensed that those who got him as a doctor were fortunate, unlike the ones who probably got the equivalent of the medical resident who wouldn't give him the medication he was supposed to take.

I've spent my fair share of time in doctors offices, with tests, and medical lingo. It is an often overwhelming world. I think what I liked most was Paul's desire to find what mattered most to a person, what they identified with and try to get them close to that again after surgery or medical procedures. His acceptance of his death almost seemed peaceful. I "ugly cried" during the epilogue which I felt more connection and emotion in than the book which was more clinical, philosophical, and detached at times. Granted Paul wrote the book and his wife the epilogue so two authors essentially.

Paul's question of what makes life worth living (and in a sense death preferable) is one we should all ponder and decide for ourselves.
reviewed When Breath Becomes Air on + 372 more book reviews
A truly moving book. A doctors story of becoming a doctor and then getting incurable cancer that takes his life. His thoughts and thinking about the process of dealing with the disease and dying.
joann avatar reviewed When Breath Becomes Air on + 412 more book reviews
Paul Kalanithi has to be one of the smartest, bravest men I have ever had the opportunity to learn about. While studying and becoming a neurosurgeon/neuroscientist, he learns of becoming afflicted with lung cancer. Paul had entered college studying literature, and was going to become a writer. He decided that his curiosity about death and science prompted him to become a neurosurgeon.
This man had such a deep longing to understand the pain, the depth of anguish experienced by someone given a diagnosis of death, that he found he needed to write about his own experience.
Unfortunately, he had not finished the book before he was taken. His wife fills in the gap and kudos to her for letting us know her love for him.
reviewed When Breath Becomes Air on + 7 more book reviews
Great book!!!! Finished the book in 3 day!!! Felt like i was apart of the family!