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A Wonderful Life: 50 Eulogies to Lift the Spirit

A Wonderful Life: 50 Eulogies to Lift the Spirit
From Algonquin Books

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Product Description

The lives of the world’s greatest contributors to arts, politics, sports, and letters are celebrated with wit, humor, and reverence by their equally famous friends,
relatives, and peers.

Here are fifty eulogies, fond remembrances of the twentieth century’s best and brightest:

World Pioneers: Martin Luther King Jr. honored by Robert Kennedy, Mahatma Gandhi by Jawaharlal Nehru

Movie Stars: Joan Crawford remembered by director George Cukor, Orson Welles by Charlton Heston

Media Titans: Katharine Graham celebrated by Ben Bradlee, Edward R.Murrow by Charles Kuralt

Entertainers: John Belushi by Dan Aykroyd, Bob Hope by Larry Gelbart

Composers and Singers: Jerry Garcia by Robert Hunter, Leonard Bernstein by Ned Rorem

Athletes: Mickey Mantle by Bob Costas, Arthur Ashe by Douglas Wilder

In these moving and personal tributes, we see the true personalities of these fifty remarkable people, shadings of character usually hidden from the spotlight.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #776734 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-05-12
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 296 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
Collected and edited by former advertising executive Copeland (Farewell, Godspeed: The Greatest Eulogies of Our Time), these 50 eulogies range from the merely functional (Alfred Kinsey's secretary's perfunctory commemoration) to the truly moving and inspirational (Father Michael Duffy's eulogy for New York's fallen fire department chaplain Father Mychal Judge). But most of the time Copeland strains to find words that resonate and uplift. In too many cases they simply fail to do so or, worse, seem exploitative. Dan Aykroyd's flip words about his drug-addicted comedy partner John Belushi—"What we are talking about here is a good man and a bad boy "—make light of the devastation Belushi's behavior wreaked on those around him. On the other hand, eulogies delivered for four victims of 9/11 are heartfelt and serious. They bear witness to sacrifice and honor. Their inclusion, in contrast to the exceedingly lightweight nature of other excerpts, feels manipulative. Copeland follows each eulogy with a brief, sometimes a bit eccentric chronological sketch (on Freud: "Attending Sigmund's birth, a peasant woman predicts his greatness"). In some cases these facts are more interesting than the platitudes that precede them. B&w photos. (May)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review
"How do you make good, in words, on the life of another human being? The real challenge of the task is evident on every page....A fascinating collection of memorial remarks about 64 well-known figures."
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution )

"You might not think of eulogies as the same thing as love stories, but here....they most certainly are. This is an extraordinary collection of 64 goodbyes to the famous from the (mostly) famous."
The Boston Globe (Boston Globe )

How do you make good, in words, on the life of another human being? The real challenge of the task is evident on every page....A fascinating collection of memorial remarks about 64 well-known figures. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution )

You might not think of eulogies as the same thing as love stories, but here....they most certainly are. This is an extraordinary collection of 64 goodbyes to the famous from the (mostly) famous. The Boston Globe (Boston Globe )

From the Inside Flap
The farewells gathered in this collection celebrate the lives of some of the most famous figures of the twentieth century, writen in most instances by their equally famous peers. Informed by wit, humor, and affection, these minibiographies include rare insight and provide a real understanding of what made these people so exceptional.
Cyrus Copeland, in his second compilation of eulogies, has collected fifty inspiring tributes that honor icons from the realms of entertainment and the arts, government and politics, science and the media.
Here we have famed film director George Cukor revealing Joan Crawford's greatest love affair—with the camera; sex research guru Alfred Kinsey memorialized by his longtime secretary; Bill Clinton on how Rosa Parks changed our world; Charles Kurault on the awe he felt in working with Edward R. Murrow; chef Jacques Pépin calling Julia Child an "antisnob"; Dan Aykroyd celebrating his friendship with John Belushi; the uniqueness of Leonard Bernstein as described by friend and fellow composer Ned Rorem; a poem written by Robert Hunter to honor Jerry Garcia; Bob Costas's homage to his greatest hero, Mickey Mantle. In addition, there are eulogies for several 9/11 heroes, and tributes to parents by three distinguished writers.
As Copeland notes in his introduction, a good eulogy can be "a bridge between the living and the dead, between us and them, memory and eternity....A great eulogy assures us that our loved ones will endure in our collective memories." And so, in these pages, fifty memorable people come alive again and, thanks to these eulogies, will continue to live in our memory.


Customer Reviews

Wonderful Indeed!5
This is a book of eulogies to people who made their lives count, from Bette Davis to Rosa Parks to an achingly poignant chapter on the heroes of 9/11. Reading this book, I expected to be saddened but instead found it strangely uplifing.
Be sure to check out the chapter devoted to parents, which includes my favorite eulogy: Pat Conroy's remembrance of his father, aka the Great Santini.

Other great eulogies: Marilyn Monroe, Greogory Peck, Edward R. Murrow, Mickey Mantle, Jerry Garcia, Coretta Scott King, Bob Hope, Princess Diana, Judy Garland, and Mister Rogers!

Warning: Reading this book will make you re-evaluate your own life....

I learned so much...5
about each person eulogized in this book...
I loved this book - simple, to the point, uplifting and inspirational. But what really struck me most was that you don't read this book with a heavy heart but rather with a desire to gain insight into people that we either knew much about or very little. One of my favorites was the eulogy written for Father Mychal Judge who died in the World Trade Towers on 9/11. Tugged at the heart, yes, but I was enlightened to learn more about what kind of person he truly was - right to the end.
You might not sit and read this book straight through...although it's hard to put down once you get started. I found it to be a great 'cup of coffee read' time and time again.

Famous Last Words5
I expected this book to move me -- after all, saying goodbye to 50 people who shaped our world for the better, cracking their lives open at the last minute by someone who knew them well enough to speak personally -- that's heady stuff. And eulogies aren't exactly fluffy fare. What surprised me was how much this book succeeds by its subtitle, not just lifting the spirit, but throwing down the gauntlet and making death into a celebration of life.

More, a celebration of 50 icons who shaped our world. (And throw in a few truly moving tributes to parents -- read the one Pat Conroy delivered for his father, The Great Santini, for an example of how to say goodbye to a difficult man. Brilliant. Honest. And resplendent with the kind of love that only comes from family, which is to say unconditional in the face of flaws.) Reading about Marilyn, Murrow, and everyone from Bette Davis to Mickey Mantle, one is flooded with a genuine sense of relief that they've been here to make our world a more colorful place. These eulogies are fairly intimate, drawing aside the curtain of celebrity and offfering a final look at the humanity of our icons.

Great eulogies don't drip with sentiment, and Copeland has combed through the great goodbyes from the las century or so to come up with a shiny handful of gems -- some funny, some irreverent, some heartrending, all poignant. Standouts include Father Mychal Judge, Princess Diana, Marilyn Monroe, Mickey Mantle, FDNY Captain Callahan, Katharine Graham, Leonard Bernstein, Jerry Garcia, Martin Luther King, and Elisabeth Kubler Ross.

The book has a lovely feel to it, and makes for either a quick coffee read -- 5 minutes at a time, including fascinating timelines for each icon -- or a primer in how to eulogize, or else a wonderful gift for someone who's just lost someone dear and could use a reminder: Death heightens the beauty of life.