Wayson Choy's first novel, The Jade Peony, spent six months on the national bestseller list of The Globe and Mail, won the Trillium Book Award in 1995, and received the 1996 Vancouver book. City book award. All That Matters was an accompaniment novel by Jade Peony, awarded the Bracketing Book Award in 2004 and is included in the 2005 Giller Award. In 1999, Choi's first memoir, Paper Shadow, was elected Governor Prize, Charles Taylor Award and Drainy - Taylor Biography Award. He won the Edna Staebler non fiction award in 2000.
Still: The memoir, which is almost dying of life, is a biography written by Canadian writer Wayson Choy, first published by Doubleday Canada in March 2009. The authors reviewed the experiences of asthma attacks and cardiac arrest. This book was well received at The Globe and Mail and online.com.
I also found it sometimes wonderful to read memoirs about death. One of my favorite books is Paul Kalanithi's "inhale into the air". He died of lung cancer in his thirties, married and wrote this book to make a child. I read it twice - when my two children were just a few days old. He not only feels right and wrong, but also provides an unparalleled view to acknowledge that reality. "The fact of death is alarming, but there is no other way to survive." Incredibly positive feelings: "Even if you die, you are still alive, I am still alive." A dying man If the words do not make you feel more fulfilling life every day, nothing happens. ! There are good books such as "bright moments", "death: memoirs", "last lecture".
Reading this book makes me feel sick. It is not just another book, it is a sacred memoir of a dying person, who is trying to keep his faith in moral completion to the end. Pursuit of the meaning of his life makes life appropriate for human life and I am forced to think about the meaning of my life. The book began at a childhood in Kingman, Arizona, where he was launched as a literature by his mother. As a potential young man, he pursued degrees in literature, biology, science and medicine philosophy to become a knowledgeable person of anxiety, finally studied medicine at Yale University and became a neurosurgeon - a neuroscientist
Dr. Elizabeth Kubler-Ross wrote what she went to Maidanek concentration camp in Poland later in the world in her book "The Wheel of Life, memory of life and death memories", a doctor known for work after death It is. Journey. Second World War. She visited children 's military camp where she encountered clothes and small shoes were thrown aside, but she also surprised her and saw something surprised her. There are hundreds of butterflies carved on the wall by pebbles and claws. When I saw a butterfly hanging on the wall, she was confused and I could not wonder why they were there and what they mean. Twenty five years later, after listening to hundreds of terminal patients, she noticed that the prisoners of the camp had to know that they would die. "They will soon know that they will become butterflies, as they die, they will leave the place like hell no longer being tortured.Besides their family members I am not. "