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This Party's Dead

Grief, Joy and Spilled Rum at the World's Death Festivals

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

What if we responded to death... by throwing a party?

By the time Erica Buist's father-in-law Chris was discovered, upstairs in his bed, his book resting on his chest, he had been dead for over a week. She searched for answers (the artery-clogging cheeses in his fridge?) and tried to reason with herself (does daughter-in-law even feature in the grief hierarchy?) and eventually landed on an inevitable, uncomfortable truth: everybody dies.

While her husband maintained a semblance of grace and poise, Erica found herself consumed by her grief, descending into a bout of pyjama-clad agoraphobia, stalking friends online to ascertain whether any of them had also dropped dead without warning, unable to extract herself from the spiral of death anxiety... until one day she decided to reclaim control.

With Mexico's Day of the Dead festivities as a starting point, Erica decided to confront death head-on by visiting seven death festivals around the world – one for every day they didn't find Chris. From Mexico to Nepal, Sicily, Thailand, Madagascar, Japan and finally Indonesia – with a stopover in New Orleans, where the dead outnumber the living ten to one – Erica searched for the answers to both fundamental and unexpected questions around death anxiety.

This Party's Deadis the account of her journey to understand how other cultures deal with mortal terror, how they move past the knowledge that they're going to die in order to live happily day-to-day, how they celebrate rather than shy away from the topic of death – and how when this openness and acceptance are passed down through the generations, death suddenly doesn't seem so scary after all.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 17, 2021
      Journalist Buist debuts with a poignant and often hilarious look at “places where people respond to death by throwing a party.” Consumed by grief and fear after the sudden death of her fiancé’s father, Buist “decided to visit death festivals in the hope of finding out how others deal with death anxiety.” She begins in Pátzcuaro, Mexico, where “going on a Day of the Dead tour as a way to feel closer to the dead is like going to Disneyland as a way to study mice.” At the Gai Jatra festival in Nepal’s Kathmandu Valley, Buist sees death celebrated as a normal marker of life, and in Palermo, Italy, for the Festa dei Morti, she bakes cookies made to resemble a dead person’s bones, noting that “where there is contemplation of death, there is sugar.” Other stops include New Orleans, where funeral-goers “dance their way to the cemetery”; Madagascar, where bodies are exhumed every five to seven years, wrapped in fresh silk shrouds, and hoisted onto the shoulders of dancing family members; and China’s Qing Ming holiday, when families sweep the tombs of their ancestors. Ultimately, Buist comes to see death festivals as “an outlet for love.” Fans of Caitlin Doughty will welcome this entertaining and thought-provoking study.

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  • English

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