Flamingnet Student Book Reviewer PFlo
The Encyclopedia of The End: Mysterious Death in Fact,
Fancy, Folklore, and More by Deborah Noyes, deals mainly
with different funeral customs around the world. It also
deals with the science, theology, and folklore of death.
This book alphabetically covers everything from an amulet of
good luck for the dead to wreaths for funerals. The book
contains pictures and sub-notes. You will find out about
the origins of modern Goth culture, where the tradition of
the hearse at funerals started, what necromancy is, how a
body decays, and more in The Encyclopedia of The End by
Deborah Noyes.
I give the Encyclopedia of The End: Mysterious Death in
Fact, Fancy, Folklore, and More by Deborah Noyes a ten. It
is a great introduction to the topic of death. This is a
topic that is not discussed in today's world as much as it
was in the past. This Encyclopedia brings death, an
essential part of life, to light in a gentle way. If the
reader has basic questions about the culture or science of
death, this book will answer these questions. Even if a
reader is scared of death, nothing in this book will scare
them. I enjoyed the part on holidays about death, such as
Bon, Day of the Dead, and Halloween. I found the Japanese
holiday of Bon especially interesting. Bon is a holiday
where the dead family members come back to earth. The
Encyclopedia of the End by Deborah Noyes will make you find
out more about death, whether by interviewing a funeral home
director, reading the works of Edgar Allen Poe, or visiting
Nagasaki, Japan during Bon.
Reviewer Age:18
Reviewer City, State and Country:
Urbana, Illinois U.S.A.