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Book reviews for "Bauby,_Jean-Dominique" sorted by average review score:

La escafandra y la mariposa
Published in Paperback by Bantam Doubleday Dell Books (January, 1998)
Author: Jean-Dominique Bauby
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Eloquent and Thoughtful
This book is captivating and touching in both English and Spanish. Knowing that each and every letter of every word written was such an effort and struggle to write...makes the experience of reading this novel that much more powerful. This book is truly eloquent and thoughtful, as well as inspiring and beautiful. The reader will close this book with a greater appreciation of what they have now.


Le Scaphandre Et Le Papillon
Published in Paperback by Distribooks Intl (January, 1999)
Author: Jean-Dominique Bauby
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an interesting, though upsetting, book
This book was written by a middle-aged man who had suffered a devastating stroke. After the stroke he was only able to move one eyelid, and so the book was laborously dictated letter by letter, using the blinking of his eye to choose letters from a computer screen. In the book he talks about his condition, and meditates about his life, both before and after the stroke. It's a compelling read. It gives you insight into the kind of life that few of us would have any access to. It's upsetting simply because you can't help thinking about how you would react in the same situation.


Diving Bell and the Butterfly
Published in Audio Cassette by Random House (Audio) (May, 1997)
Authors: Jean-Dominique Bauby, Charles Frazier, and Rene Auberjonois
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Humbling and uplifting.
This short book is easy to read. However, it took an extraordinary effort to write it. Reading it is a humbling and insightful experience. We read of how a man lost all function, except one eyelid. And despite being seemingly imprisoned in a paralyzed body, he still had an active and free mind. Most of the book tells of how he escaped the drudgery of his overall condition and daily routine by traveling the highways of memories within his mind. He not only reflected on life, but continued to live as best as he could. I am thankful that Mr. Bauby shared his experience w/ others. I found it to be humbling, uplifting and humorous reading.

life worth living
In December of 1995, Jean-Dominique Bauby, 43 year old editor in chief of Elle magazine in France, suffered a stroke which severely damaged his brain stem. After several weeks in a coma, he woke to find that he was one of the rare victims of a condition called "locked-in syndrome" or LIS, which had left his mind functioning but his body almost completely paralyzed. In a perverse sense he actually got fairly lucky because, unlike most victims, he was still able to move one eyelid. This allowed him to work out, with a speech therapist, a system of communication which entailed winking as someone slowly read through the alphabet. By using this code, he could painstakingly spell out words, sentences, paragraphs and, finally, this memoir.

The title of the book refers to the metaphors he uses to describe his situation. The physical paralysis leaves him feeling as if he was trapped within a diving bell, as if there is constant pressure pinning his body into immobility. However, at the same time, his mind remains as free as a butterfly and it's flights are as random. In fact, he calls the chapters of this book his "bedridden travel notes" and, indeed, they eloquently relate his journey through memory.

Although Bauby's situation is obviously unique, this book has universal resonance because his condition is itself an apt metaphor for the human condition. It is the essence of Man's dilemma that our infinitely perfectible minds are trapped within such weak containers of flesh and blood. For most of us, at most times, this frustrating dichotomy, between that which makes us godlike and that which makes us mortal, lurks in the background; but the author has it thrust rudely into the foreground, where it necessarily dominates his existence. This makes it all the more remarkable that Bauby is able to "write" about his life with such great humor and generosity of spirit and with so little bitterness.

Public opinion surveys reveal an interesting contrast in modern opinions on the "right to die." Contrary to the accepted wisdom, the so-called right is favored by those who are young and healthy, but opposed by those who are old and sick. The very premise which underlies such a right is the belief that the quality of life experienced by the aged and the ill is so inadequate that they would willingly choose death instead. In fact, the evidence suggests that--despite the anecdotal horror stories with which all of us are familiar--people generally cling to life even in the face of suffering which seems unendurable to the well.

Bauby's book, for all the horror that we naturally feel at his status, is wonderfully optimistic and life affirming. Sure, there are a few moments of well earned self pity, but they are almost completely drowned out by the author's enduring hopes and dreams and memories. Jean-Dominique Bauby died two days after this book was published, but in it's pages, he left behind one of the great testament's to the splendor and majesty of the human spirit. In these times when people tend to complain about the pettiest matters, he reminds us that even when life is genuinely difficult, it is still quite beautiful and invaluable and well worth living.

GRADE: A+

The most beautiful book I've ever read
The Diving Bell and The Butterfly is a dead-on honest book by a man facing an extreme situation unimaginable to most of us, and probably a biggest fear of most of us. Yet Mr. Bauby produces a book (the process of which alone being remarkable) that is beautiful, lyrical and completely without sentimentality. It is my favorite book. I have given many copies to numerous friends and will continue to do so.


Care and Equality: Inventing a New Family Politics
Published in Hardcover by Knopf (August, 1999)
Authors: Mona Harrington and Jean-Dominique Bauby
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The Diving Bell and the Butterfly: Tabletop Display Card
Published in Paperback by Vintage Books USA (July, 1998)
Authors: Jean-Dominique Bauby and Jeremy Leggatt
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Diving Bell/Buttrfly-Aud
Published in Hardcover by Random House Value Publishing (March, 1999)
Author: Jean-Dominique Bauby
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The Diving-bell & the Butterfly (BBC Radio Collection)
Published in Audio Cassette by BBC Consumer Publishing (06 October, 1997)
Authors: Jean-Dominique Bauby and Richard Derrington
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Raoul Lévy : un aventurier du cinéma
Published in Unknown Binding by J.C. Lattáes ()
Author: Jean-Dominique Bauby
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