"This book is everything I admire about Alua''s work. She drapes the reaper in sparkles and sunsets, allowing you to stare down mortality''s harshest truths swaddled in safety, joy, and the dignity of unsparing honesty." -- Caitlin Doughty, author of Smoke Gets in Your Eyes: And Other Lessons from the Crematory "Briefly Perfectly Human is a beautiful, raw, light-bringing experience. Alua''s voice is shimmering, singular, and pulses with humor, vulnerability, insight, and refreshing candor. I am here for every page of this card-on-the-table offering of the authentic heart. Be prepared for it to grab you, hold you tight, and raise the roof on the power of human connection." -- Tembi Locke, author of From Scratch: A Memoir of Love, Sicily, and Finding Home "There are two truths universal to the human experience: one, we''re all going to die, and two, if we try to pretend that''s not true, we''ll never really live. This is what Alua Arthur knows firsthand--and shares with us in a book sizzling with vitality on every page.
" -- Lori Gottlieb, New York Times bestselling author of Maybe You Should Talk to Someone and co-host of the Dear Therapists podcast "Alua Arthur is a wild gem and a guiding light who is here to help all of us understand one simple truth--that embracing death actually helps us to live a more meaningful life. Briefly Perfectly Human encompasses laughter and love and all the rich complexities that come with being a person in the world. For anyone who has ever loved, grieved, wondered, and feared, this book will leave you inspired and emboldened." -- Claire Bidwell Smith, author of Conscious Grieving "A poetic, inspiring book about how embracing our mortality allows us to find our deepest selves and truly connect with others. Arthur''s powerful memoir underlines the value of every life." -- Kirkus Reviews (starred review) "Briefly Perfectly Human is a deeply urgent, divinely-inspired memoir that guides our understanding of death as an inevitable part of this glorious human experience. Alua Arthur''s life, myriad personal losses, and death doula care are a gift. Her extraordinary insight into how we can truly live is inspiring.
As a physician, I strive for the day when we, as Americans, fully support the health of the living and, when it is time, tend to a peaceful death. Briefly Perfectly Human, so aptly titled, is a positive model of what healthcare could be." -- Michele Harper, author of The Beauty in Breaking: A Memoir "Alua Arthur''s work as a death doula has led her to have a truly unique, inspiring perspective on the time we have, what we do with it, and how we let go of this world. Finally she''s offering that perspective to the rest of us, in Briefly Perfectly Human. And it''s about time. There is no one I''d trust more to guide me through an understanding of death, and how it informs life." -- Jodi Picoult, New York Times bestselling author of Mad Honey and The Book of Two Ways "Thank goodness for Alua Arthur and Briefly Perfectly Human. Her message is kind, simple, urgent and necessary: that the most profound thing any of us can do to prepare for death is to lead a genuine and intentional life.
This is our homework, and as Alua shows us by all that she witnesses and shares in these moving and inspiring pages, achieving our best lives is only ever a matter of actually living it -- the lives we actually have -- with eyes wide open and, if possible, arms outstretched." -- BJ Miller, author of A Beginner''s Guide to the End "A delightfully warm memoir. Arthur''s touching stories provide a lovely reminder of why contemplating the pain of death is so important for living a more intentional, beautiful life." -- Laurie Santos, Professor of Psychology at Yale University and host of The Happiness Lab podcast "Joyful, hilarious, effervescent, brilliant and deeply wise." -- Glennon Doyle, on Alua Arthur "[An] elegant debut memoir. Interweaving the account of her journey to becoming a death doula with digressions into her legal career, romantic relationships, bouts of depression, and childhood memories of fleeing Ghana with her family in the 1980s, Arthur poignantly recalls how her clients prepared for death, whether in quiet privacy or surrounded by music, art, and friends, ''in full surrender, grateful for the gift to have been. human.'' Taken together, these stories portray death as simultaneously personal, universal, and unknowable, a complexity that Arthur acknowledges with consummate respect.
Readers of Caitlin Doughty and Lori Gottlieb will be fascinated." -- Publishers Weekly "[An] upbeat, entertaining, and life-affirming account. Witty, themed chapters explore the influences that led Arthur to her career as a death doula and shaped her training, outlook, and personal growth. Her descriptions of past cases . showcase both her professionalism and her empathetic grace. She shares what she''s learned: every day we live, we''re one day older than we''ve ever been before and one day closer to death. It''s time to love our ever-evolving selves and make the most of every day. Arthur''s is wise, thoughtful, reassuring counsel.
" -- Booklist "A memoir about [Alua''s] unique profession that''s also an eloquent argument for embracing our mortality and approaching the end with honesty and gratitude -- and maybe even joy." -- AARP Magazine.