"a rich and sweeping account of how death has reflected and shaped human life since pre-history." - TLS"A Brief History of Death has a great deal to offer: a historian-magpies collection of hundreds of engaging topics that readers can dip into." - The Guardian"After the spate of near-death and out-of-the-body experience books comes this refreshing step back to examine the nature of the death experience culturally, historically, psychologically and personally . . . Recommended reading as an antidote to modern life." - Fortean Times"Spellman provides a general guidebook on death and memorialisation amongst human beings with a strong focus on western worlds . . . [the book] would benefit a general readership or an early undergraduate introduction to life and death. It possesses a good mix of material derived from established scientific and arts-humanities scholarship. Beingbrief it inevitably sketches and hints at topics rather than explore any in depth, but it will, at least, direct readers to themes they might not have considered previously." - Social History of Medicine"This [book] is both timely and necessary . . . The 200-page examination of evolving attitudes to death is balanced, erudite and readable" - Methodist Recorder"explores how our concerns and perceptions about mortality form a part of our inquiry into what it ultimately means to be human, alive and living. This historical study packs a wealth of information for its size. It is an ambitious interdisciplinary project that uniquely knits together the fields of philosophy, religion, medical ethics, sociology, psychology and our medical profession into a coherent narrative . . . This introduction will be of interest to anyone with a fascination for the evolution of historical and philosophical perspectives of death based on the evidence of scholarship and writings of major thinkers in their respective fields." - The Bulletin of The Royal College of Pathologists"In a short narrative, Spellman packs abundant reflection . . . This treatment of how people try to rationalize, hasten, outwit or supplant death leaves one mulling over our frailty. Spellman counsels us to give in, rather than fight the doomed contest against organic decay. He accepts our own placement between these two towering bookends, generation and termination." - Spectrum Culture"an interesting and informative, wide-angle survey of ideas about mortality . . . Throughout the book Spellman includes provoking contrasts between death then and now, as well as comments on future trends" - Church Monuments