Amazon.co.uk Review
On December 8, 1995, Jean-Dominique Bauby's life was forever altered when a part of his body he'd never heard of--his brain stem--was rendered inactive. The Diving Bell and the Butterfly, his exquisitely painful memoir, is neither a triumphant account of recovery nor a journey into the abyss of self-pity. Instead, it is a tender testament to the power of language and love. At 43, Bauby was defined by success, wit and charisma. But in the course of a few bewildering minutes, the editor-in-chief of French Elle became a victim of the rare locked-in syndrome. The only way he could express his frustration, however, was by blinking his left eye. The rest of his body could no longer respond. Bauby was determined to escape the paralysis of his diving bell and free the butterflies of his imagination. And with the help of ESA, "a hit parade in which each letter is placed according to the frequency of its use in the French language," Bauby did so. Visitors, and eventually his editor, would read each letter aloud and he would blink at the right one. Slowly--painstakingly-- words, sentences, paragraphs and even this graceful book emerged.
Bauby relays the horrors and small graces of his struggle, which range from awaking one day to discover his right eye being sewn shut to realising the significance of Father's Day, a holiday previously absent from his family's "emotional calendar": "Today we spent the whole of the symbolic day together, affirming that even a rough sketch, a shadow, a tiny fragment of a dad is still a dad." The author makes it clear that being locked in doesn't kick open the doors of perception, but The Diving Bell and the Butterfly is nonetheless a celebration of life. Jean Dominique-Bauby died of a heart attack on March 9, 1997, two days after his book was published in France. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
The Gloss magazine
'Life-enhancing and devastating in equal measure - everyone should
read it.' --This text refers to the Paperback edition.
让-多米尼克·鲍比,1952年生,在巴黎求学。后任记者数年。1991年,出任法国《ELEE》杂志总编辑。1995年12月8日,突发脑中风。1997年3月9日,去世。
其实我们都爱胡思乱想 只是有时候觉得缺时间又或者怕被被人嘲笑等等的原因而放下乱如麻的思绪 最后以插上耳机看窗外的风景结束 曾记得现在的高三班主任自虐兄说过,七年了,我就是从浦东到浦西,每天乘轮渡过江,因为实在是不知道做什么,于是就望着眼前的景色眼神游离,任思...
评分一、死亡的预留席 死亡是餐厅角落的预留席。总有一天,每个人都会坐上那个位子。在深知这个事实的同时,每个人也尽量对那个位子视而不见,自动扫入眼角的盲区,推说死亡过于遥远。于是,对于生活中随处可见的死亡,人们也尽量忽略不计——当叶子从枝头“唉呀”一声飘...
评分让-多米尼克•鲍比全身的所有器官都下了地狱,除了一只能动的左眼皮,于是便有了《潜水钟与蝴蝶》,一曲忧伤疲惫但略带灵魂安息之美的生命离伤。两个月后,鲍比去了天堂的某个地方,他全身都像羽毛一般轻盈,翅膀划过天空就会听到灵魂的叮叮当当,但是我们却已然失去了他...
评分如果不是知道作者的背景资料,我连会不会买这本书都会怀疑。四万字多一点卖二十块钱,贵得我是魂魄归天。况且,即使我知道原文作者乃时尚编辑,文字诗意,我也对翻译实在不敢抱如此大的希望,毕竟每一次翻译,都是一次弱化。短短四万字,再弱化个百分之二三十,到底还是不值...
评分一看再看的书定是对自己有特殊的意义,我不知道这意义是什么,只知道内心需求它,一年总得看它一回。有个不看书的朋友,说自己特别好静,好思考人生的意义,想找一本适合自己的书,我推荐这书给她,快一年了才还我,说看不懂,还是听着佛乐练书法心里舒服。 意识的蝴蝶翩飞于天...
补记一下,高中听完的电子书,朗读者 René Auberjonois, 封面是浸在深蓝夜色中的灯塔。从来没想过这本书有一天会因为电影改编火起来。
评分补记一下,高中听完的电子书,朗读者 René Auberjonois, 封面是浸在深蓝夜色中的灯塔。从来没想过这本书有一天会因为电影改编火起来。
评分补记一下,高中听完的电子书,朗读者 René Auberjonois, 封面是浸在深蓝夜色中的灯塔。从来没想过这本书有一天会因为电影改编火起来。
评分补记一下,高中听完的电子书,朗读者 René Auberjonois, 封面是浸在深蓝夜色中的灯塔。从来没想过这本书有一天会因为电影改编火起来。
评分补记一下,高中听完的电子书,朗读者 René Auberjonois, 封面是浸在深蓝夜色中的灯塔。从来没想过这本书有一天会因为电影改编火起来。
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