
THE ECLIPSE: A MEMOIR OF SUICIDE
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"My mind was
no more than a shifting tray of shattered crystal,
bits of glass, my own teeth may have been amongst
the mess."
- from
The Eclipse: A Memoir of Suicide
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Novelist Antonella Gambotto was awoken at seven one
Saturday morning by a telephone call. She could never
have anticipated the subsequent devastation.
The Eclipse: A Memoir of Suicide is an astonishing
account of one woman's experience of love and loss.
Gambotto's insight and compassion are startling; her
ability to make sense of suicide, revolutionary.
Does any man have the right to dispose of his own life?
This is, she writes, the ultimate debate of moral entitlement.
She explains the premise of suicide and how it pivots
on a fatal logical flaw. Presenting an eloquent case
against our understanding of depression and bereavement,
she poses a profound question:
If death is a process and not a state, how does that
change the experience of grief?
Arguably the most important memoir ever written about
loss, The Eclipse hypnotizes the reader from the outset.
Gambotto's life has been saturated by death. The first
boy who proposed to her shot himself in the head at
the age of sixteen. Michael VerMeulen, her great love
and the legendary American editor of British GQ, overdosed
on cocaine at the age of 38. And then her baby brother,
gone.
Grief is, she writes, something like coals to be walked
upon.
Passionate and magnificently written, The Eclipse should
be given to anyone whose heart has been torn out by
loss, and to those who want to love without fear.
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- The Eclipse
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