“Mitford’s funny and unforgiving book is the best we are likely to get. It should be updated and reissued each decade for our spiritual health.”
“Brilliant… hilarious… A must-read for anyone planning to throw a funeral in their lifetime.”
“Witty and penetrating—it speaks the truth.”
Only the scathing wit and searching intelligence of Jessica Mitford could turn an exposé of the American funeral industry into a book that is at once deadly serious and side-splittingly funny. When first published in 1963 this landmark of investigative journalism became a runaway bestseller and resulted in legislation to protect grieving families from the unscrupulous sales practices of those in “the dismal trade.”
Just before her death in 1996, Mitford thoroughly revised and updated her classic study. confronts new trends, including the success of the profession’s lobbyists in Washington, inflated cremation costs, the telemarketing of pay-in-advance graves, and the effects of monopolies in a death-care industry now dominated by multinational corporations. With its hard-nosed consumer activism and a satiric vision out of Evelyn Waugh’s novel , will not fail to inform, delight, and disturb.