Shaking hands with death / Terry Pratchett.
- Pratchett, Terry
- Date:
- 2015
- Books
About this work
Description
Why we all deserve a life worth living and a death worth dying for. 'Most men don't fear death. They fear those things - the knife, the shipwreck, the illness, the bomb - which precede, by microseconds if you're lucky, and many years if you're not, the moment of death.' When Terry Pratchett was diagnosed with Alzheimer's in his fifties he was angry - not with death but with the disease that would take him there, and with the suffering disease can cause when we are not allowed to put an end to it. In this essay, broadcast to millions as the BBC Richard Dimblebly Lecture 2010, he argues for our right to choose - our right to a good life, and a good death too.
Publication/Creation
London : Corgi Books, 2015.
Physical description
58 pages ; 16 cm
Contributors
Languages
Where to find it
Location Status History of MedicinePVV /PRAOpen shelves
Permanent link
Identifiers
ISBN
- 9780552172776
- 0552172774