cover image Close to the Bone: Life-Threatening Illness and the Search for Meaning

Close to the Bone: Life-Threatening Illness and the Search for Meaning

Jean Shinoda Bolen. Scribner Book Company, $23 (224pp) ISBN 978-0-684-82237-2

The crisis brought on by a serious or disastrous illness is the concern of this richly probing essay by a Jungian analyst and medical doctor. Although various diseases are touched on, cancer--especially as it affects women--is Bolen's focus. Yet far from being a grim tract, this book is a kind of metaphysical how-to filled with hope, second chances and sound guidance. But from the very first ""initiation story"" the author narrates for us--the myth of the abduction to the underworld of Persephone, an ancient Greek emblem of spring, vitality, rebirth--Bolen makes clear that there are dark and dangerous realms to traverse to learn how to help make oneself well and whole again. In her view, there is no mind/body split, no dichotomy between psyche and soma: the mind is everywhere in the body and affects physiological outcomes. While the book's Jungian tone will keep some readers away (even as it attracts others), and while it's not full of original ideas, it is a skillful assemblage of views on the harrowing experience of physical illness and mental dissociation from which we can and may emerge with a new clarity about who we are and what we want our lives to be. (Oct.)