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Hereafter : Searching for Immortality

Hereafter : Searching for Immortality
By Richard Schweid

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Product Description

As long as we have existed, we have wondered what happens when we die.

Each generation must confront its fear and helplessness in the face of the fact that this self, which takes so much effort to construct and inhabit and nurture, this body that we’ve worn and washed and lived in, is likely to last, from start to finish, considerably less than a century.

Responses to the prospect of dying take three principal forms: some believe that we shall be resurrected to pass eternity with intact bodies as the same people we were during our earthly sojourns; some believe that what survives is a "soul," or an essence, which leaves behind forever the dead and decomposing receptacle in which it resided; and some believe that death erases our snowflake lives entirely.

Author Richard Schweid augments his research with interviews with theologians, farmers, medical examiners, preachers, rabbis, and imams.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1735353 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-08-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 304 pages

Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Richard Schweid was born in Nashville, Tennessee, and now lives in Barcelona, Spain, where he is senior editor of the magazine Barcelona Metropolitan. His books include Che's Chevrolet: Fidel's Oldsmobile: On the Road in Cuba; Consider the Eel (winner, best sci-tech book of 2002, Library Journal); Catfish and the Delta: Confederate Fish Farming in the Mississippi Delta; Hot Peppers: The Story of Cajuns and Capsicum; and The Cockroach Papers: A Compendium of History and Lore.


Customer Reviews

Richard Schweid looks at the Afterlife5
Question: What do the following have in common?
- Chili peppers
- Eels
- Classic American cars in Cuba
- Cockroaches
- Spanish transvestites
- Catfish in the Mississippi Delta
- Immortality

Answer: Absolutely nothing -- other than the fact that Richard Schweid has found inspiration for a great book in each of them.

Richard Schweid has a uniquely charming way of telling a story. I've been a fan since reading his book on chili peppers years ago. As you read his work, you feel his presence there with you, but he never overpowers the voices of the people he's introducing you to or the essence of the tale he's telling. All of his books mix first-class reporting with serious scholarship and a fluid, witty writing style -- not to mention the sort of unique intelligence that leads a person to write about such diverse topics in the first place.

With Hereafter, he's managed to tell a story that is as universal as they come and yet still somehow deeply personal. He takes us along as he travels from Appalachia to the Ganges in search of answers to the Big Question: What comes next?

Without giving anything away, I can say that Mr. Schweid suffered an important loss while writing this book, and he manages to integrate his experience into the text in a way I've never seen before, but that I found profoundly moving. There can be no doubt that this is a man who writes from the heart.

Hereafter is a wonderful read: erudite, amusing, intimate, surprising and above all, very well-written throughout.