Join Books.org — it's free

Near-Death & Out of Body Experiences, U.S. Authors - 20th Century - Literary Biography, Journalists - News & Media Biography
Second Chance by Marvin Barrett β€” book cover

Second Chance

by Marvin Barrett
Write a review
Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

Aging is revealed to be a rich and blessed experience, in this chronicle of the events surrounding the author's near-death experience by cardiac arrest.

After his brush with death, Barrett recognized a reprieve and a challenge in the old age he had once dreaded. Contrary to prevailing views of aging, he saw before him a stage of life that is equivalent, if not superior, to any previous one, filled with new insights and opportunities for spiritual growth.

About the Author, Marvin Barrett

Marvin Barrett is an award-winning journalist and author, as well as a senior editor of PARABOLA.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

"I died and was born again," writes Barrett of his near-death experience in 1984 at age 63. There was no tunnel with a light at the end, no life review, but rather, a green, seductive, luminous slope. This book, which consists of journal excerpts written between 1984 and 1990, is a sequel of sorts to Spare Days (1988), in which this former Time and Newsweek journalist described his battle against cancer with clarity and eloquence. Barrett's central message that old age is potentially the best stage of life, a time of freedom for significant thought and action, is a welcome one. But his musings, though clearly heartfelt, are less than fresh, even obvious (life "is a privilege, a treasure, not to be wasted, rejected, even for a minute"). Barrett led an interesting life in the 1980s, and much of what he reports on is notable. He tells of travels to Israel and to India, where he visits "holy Englishman" Father Bede Griffiths in his ashram; recalls his 1946 sojourn at the Southern California spiritual retreat of English guru Gerald Heard; records travel impressions, ranging from Seattle to his hometown of Des Moines, Iowa; and re-creates encounters with Max Lerner and Paul Nitze. There are sporadic phone calls from his father-in-law, composer Irving Berlin, a recluse during the 1980s, and reminiscences of happier times with Berlin decades earlier. Sprinkled with quotes on aging, faith and death from Jung, Tennyson, Goethe, Braque, Augustine and Brillat-Savarin, this thoughtful daybook works best in those moments when Barrett writes with simple directness, as when he discusses his delight in his grandson or the beauty of the Italian village of Taormina. (Mar.)

Napra Review

After a sucessful journalisnm career, Barrett suffered a heartattack, from which he recovered. But that is just the beginning; indeed, it's a second chance....Entries from the journal Barrett kept for the seven years after the heart attack tell the story of a late-life journey through a space as clear as the one he lived in at 20, full of ordinary events and interesting places and famous people. It is the story of filling the space and making sense of it, a hero's journey. 'Every old person, like it or not, is a hero, since heroism is quintessentially the conscious facing of death and holding firm.'

New Visions

With writing that has been likened to flawless literary jewelry by Kurt Vonnegut and spare and beautiful as mortal bone by Peter Matthiessen, Marvin Barrett charts his course...[and] energizes and ennobles a process of living and growing old.

Book Details

Published
April 1, 1999
Publisher
New York : Parabola Books, c1999.
Pages
205
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780930407421

More by Marvin Barrett

Similar books