Dah života

Paperback, 224 pages

Serbian language

Published Dec. 30, 2016 by Laguna.

ISBN:
978-86-521-2282-0
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OCLC Number:
957644802

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4 stars (3 reviews)

Sa svojih trideset šest godina, na pragu svršetka desetogodišnjeg školovanja za neurohirurga, Pol Kalaniti je otkrio da ima neizlečiv rak pluća. Jednoga dana bio je doktor koji leči umiruće, već sledećeg pacijent koji se bori za život.

Šta životu daje vrednost kada se smrti svakodnevno gleda u oči? Šta da činimo kada nam se život u potpunosti preokrene? Šta znači dobiti dete dok ti se sopstveni život gasi?

Pol Kalaniti je umro dok je još radio na ovoj duboko dirljivoj knjizi, pa ipak njegove reči i dalje žive da bi svima nama poslužile kao vodič. Dah života slavi život kroz duboka razmišljanja o suočenju sa smrću i o odnosu između doktora i pacijenta, a njen autor je nadaren pisac koji je bio i jedno i drugo. Bilo da nam je ostao dan života, bilo da nam predstoji čitav jedan dug ljudski vek, Dah života značiće jednu od onih nezamenljivih smernica …

29 editions

Didn't find this to live up to the hype or even the blurb...

3 stars

I feel icky giving low ratings to memoirs and biographies, but I just can't bring myself to give more than 3 stars for this one.

It was interesting to be able to see life through the lens of a neurosurgeon. But I felt like there were few moments where I was actually learning about what Paul went through, what he learned, what he truly felt. It lacked the emotion that I expected with someone coming to terms with knowing that their life will be short-lived and trying to move along with that. I learned far more in the afterword from his wife than I did in the entire book.

I also just have a particular dislike for people who decide to have kids when they know one parent will not be alive to see that child grow past being a toddler. It's not my life, and people should live how …

A thoughtful, poignant and personal narrative

5 stars

I was reading this book when I got an MRI result stating "very high likelihood of clinical cancer", so I really took a personal interest, and still after my biopsy returned nothing (I'm at the age where increasingly medical visits end with "good news, you don't have cancer") I was wrapped up in the author's journey even though I knew how it was going to end. Much of his story is about his quest to understand the human condition through medicine, science, literature, and religion, and his battle with cancer was no different.

Review of 'When Breath Becomes Air' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Once in a while, there's a book that will make me pause when I finish reading it. I will close the book and simply hold it and look at the cover and try and absorb what I just experienced. This is one of those books. It takes hold of you.

It's NOT easy to read from an emotional stand point. You know that Paul died prior to publication. I was most moved and drawn in by the epilogue, written by his wife Lucy.