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240 reviews for:
Do ostatnich dni. Zapis życia, choroby i wszystkiego, co przychodzi później
Julie Yip-Williams
240 reviews for:
Do ostatnich dni. Zapis życia, choroby i wszystkiego, co przychodzi później
Julie Yip-Williams
challenging
emotional
hopeful
informative
inspiring
reflective
sad
medium-paced
Lovely perspective on dying: moving, profound, and amazing in many ways. I respect very much her life and her work on the book. It is sad, and at times, the emotional details were hard for me to hear. I listened to the audiobook, and that probably accentuated the emotion.
4 stars
This is a very tough and emotional read. I can only imagine how much more painful it must have been to live, and die, through it. Julie's story provides insight to something we'll
experience eventually.
This is a very tough and emotional read. I can only imagine how much more painful it must have been to live, and die, through it. Julie's story provides insight to something we'll
experience eventually.
She definitely is a gifted writer. I am a survivor doesn't usually read books about cancer but I did like this one, she was brutally honest in what she shared.
Beautiful ideas and a good story but too sad for me. I had to read it in chunks.
Whew...this book was a doozy. It came out several years ago and I know so many of my bookish friends really enjoyed it. I also knew I would too as soon as I could gather the courage up to tackle it. I put this on my #23in23 list because I wanted to prioritize it.
Julie Yip-Williams has quite the life story - born blind in Vietnam, her grandmother encouraged her parents to take her to a local herbalist to have her euthinized (yes, you read that correctly). Fortunately, the herbalist refused and her relieved parents returned home with her. They then escaped Vietman on a sinking boat and eventually made their way to America. After life-changing surgery on her eyes, Yip-Williams was able to partially see. She became a lawyer and landed a job in NYC at a law firm, met and fell in love with her husband, and had two daughters. Then, she was diagnosed with Stage IV colon cancer.
Her book is ultimately a love letter to her girls. It details her life and gives them something to look back on and read as they grow up. I absolutely love and adore the time and dedication it took to leave this tangible legacy behind for her kids. As someone who has lost her mother to cancer, there are so many times I wish I could read something to learn more about her. When I was younger, I didn't think to ask those questions, so this whole project is remarkable to me.
The book was published posthumously with her husband writing the last chapter. I was a puddled mess on the floor when I finished. Really, everthing about this book is just so beautiful. A lot of Yip-Willimas' procedures were similar to my moms, so the cancer journey really brought up a lot of emotions for me. There were some parts that got a little long and dense, so detailed that I would find myself drifting.
But overall, probably mostly because of my own personal experience with the subject of the book, I really loved this one.
Julie Yip-Williams has quite the life story - born blind in Vietnam, her grandmother encouraged her parents to take her to a local herbalist to have her euthinized (yes, you read that correctly). Fortunately, the herbalist refused and her relieved parents returned home with her. They then escaped Vietman on a sinking boat and eventually made their way to America. After life-changing surgery on her eyes, Yip-Williams was able to partially see. She became a lawyer and landed a job in NYC at a law firm, met and fell in love with her husband, and had two daughters. Then, she was diagnosed with Stage IV colon cancer.
Her book is ultimately a love letter to her girls. It details her life and gives them something to look back on and read as they grow up. I absolutely love and adore the time and dedication it took to leave this tangible legacy behind for her kids. As someone who has lost her mother to cancer, there are so many times I wish I could read something to learn more about her. When I was younger, I didn't think to ask those questions, so this whole project is remarkable to me.
The book was published posthumously with her husband writing the last chapter. I was a puddled mess on the floor when I finished. Really, everthing about this book is just so beautiful. A lot of Yip-Willimas' procedures were similar to my moms, so the cancer journey really brought up a lot of emotions for me. There were some parts that got a little long and dense, so detailed that I would find myself drifting.
But overall, probably mostly because of my own personal experience with the subject of the book, I really loved this one.
A 2019 staff favorite recommended by Connie. Check our catalog: https://encore.cooklib.org/iii/encore/search/C__Sunwinding%20of%20the%20miracle__Orightresult__U?lang=eng&suite=gold
It was too much for my mental state when I tried to read it. I expect i will check it out again and will finish it but it just wasn't the time for me right then.
It’s a beautiful story of facing life as imminent death sneaks into one’s life. It was a humbling story of learning to live in the goodness of life.