How to live forever The enduring power of connecting the generations

Marc Freedman

Book - 2018

The founder of Encore.org traces his thirty-year quest to meet the challenges of a society with more older than younger members, sharing insights into longevity, age segregation, and the experiences of remarkable, everyday people.

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Subjects
Published
New York : PublicAffairs 2018.
Language
English
Main Author
Marc Freedman (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xii, 202 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781541767812
  • Introduction: Extensions
  • Making the most of a society with mare old than young
  • Chapter 1. Biology Flows Downhill
  • The real fountain of youth is in the same place it has always been
  • Chapter 2. Love and Death
  • Where are the human beings to do those things only humans can do?
  • Chapter 3. Age Apartheid
  • If connecting across generations is so natural, why isn't it happening everywhere?
  • Chapter 4. An Army for Youth
  • What we learned from launching Experience Corps
  • Chapter 5. Dreaming and Scheming
  • Finding new ways to do old things
  • Chapter 6. A Village for All Ages
  • What the rest of the world can teach us
  • Chapter 7. Rerouting the River of Life
  • If biology flows downhill, why not society?
  • Chapter 8. Living Mortal
  • How to live on through letting go (and other lessons from the masters)
  • Epilogue: We Wait Too Long
  • More conscious than ever of the passage of time
  • Author's Note
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes and Sources
  • Recommended Reading List
  • Recommended Movie List
  • Recommended Video List
  • Index
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A veteran advocate for mixing rather than segregating the generations returns with a volume whose title is hyperbolic but whose subtitle tells the story.Social entrepreneur Freedman (The Big Shift: Navigating the New Stage Beyond Midlife, 2011, etc.) writes that he's "never much trusted self-help books or advice," but he's written one of the former and dispenses plenty of the latter. Regardless, the author's principal point is important: The warehousing of our elderly, the establishment of elder-only communities all over the Southwest and elsewherethese are turning out to be grievous wounds that we are inflicting upon ourselves. Their existence and proliferation deny the young easy access to the experience and wisdom of their elders, and they also deny (or make difficult) opportunities for older Americans to employ the skillssocial, intellectual, emotionalthat so many of them possess, skills that could have great social benefit. One of the strengths of the book is Freedman's use of specifics: He tells stories about people who are doing what he advocates, communities that are working to mix the old and the young, and programs that he thinks are hopeful, including his own Generation to Generation, part of his organization encore.org. He also celebrates some individuals who have had an enduring effect on his own thinking and life, most notably the late John W. Gardner, the author of such classics as Excellence: Can We Be Equal and Excellent Too? (1961), a man whom Freedman revered and who, the author tells us, once said that Freedman was like the son he never had. The author's tone is enthusiastic and hopeful throughout, but the diction is occasionally clichd ("the road hasn't been entirely smooth"). Nonetheless, his enthusiasm is infectious and affecting, and his agenda bristles with sincerity and significance.A book that grabs us by the shoulders, turns us toward an important issue, and grips us until we truly see and understand. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.