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Book Review of The Last Gift of Time: Life Beyond Sixty

reviewed on + 39 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 4


There is something peaceful in reading the perspectives of a successful, intellectual, independent, and reflexive woman writing about what it is like to be entering the last chapters of ones life. She can be blunt and politically incorrect about relationships (men are boring), and she can be lyrical about the last decades of life (The piercing sense of last time adds intensity, while the possibility of again is never quite effaced.). She offers the wisdom of perspective (There is no commitment that does not bring with it its own tensions, and its own ambivalences.).

I was drawn to her notes about the dialectical tension revolving around the need for being alone and the need for being connected (Those who seek solitude often mistake it, I suspect. They want it because they can leave it, because it is not their whole destiny.).

I, too, hope to have the freedom, whimsy, and incorrigibility to face my last gift of time whenever that may be.

A short, delightful read.