"Readers may find Guroian's weaving of a variety of literary allusions into his evocation of theological tradition instructive as they construct their own responses to death and Dr. Kevorkian." Booklist
"Thoughtful book." Catholic News Service
"This book reasserts the Christian tradition of a "good death," one that cannot include euthanasia or assisted suicide. Believers will be reminded of the richness of Christian teaching about dying and salvation; nonbelievers, of the dangers of disconnecting compassion from its roots in the Christian gospel of love." Edmund D. Pellegrino, M. D. (Georgetown University Medical Center)
"Continuing his work in liturgy and ethics, Guroian demonstrates how the Christian tradition—richly embodied in liturgical worship—provides a cogent alternative to the contemporary "culture of death" prophetically depicted in Walker Percy's Thanatos Syndrome and exemplified in the words and deeds of Jack Kevorkian.
Through an engaging analysis of literature and contemporary culture, Guroian traces the dynamics of our simultaneous aversion to and obsession with death." The Christian Century