:INFO The Unfinished Book That Finished Me Paul Kalanithi was a neurosurgeon who was diagnosed with terminal lung cancer at 36 and spent his remaining months writing about what makes life meaningful. He did not finish the book. His wife Lucy added an epilogue. The book ends without ending and that fact is not a flaw. It is the most honest thing the book could do. I have read it three times and each time I reach the last pages I am as unprepared for them as I was the first time. I do not think that will change. :COUNTER.half 228 Pages | :COUNTER.half 3 Times Read :QUOTE [quotetype:plain, subtitle:Paul Kalanithi] What makes life meaningful enough to go on living? :JOURNEY Reading When Breath Becomes Air 4 Dense and human 5 Register shifts 5 What matters 5 Most devastating :NOW Thinking about which of the questions Kalanithi raises about meaning I have actually tried to answer since I first read this, and which I have continued to defer. :NOTE This is not a sad book to avoid. It is a sad book to read. There is a difference, and the difference matters for knowing when to pick it up.