"The Truth About Death, the title novella of this virtuosic collection, is a masterpiece of sardonic humor that confronts Death head on and emerges bloody but unbowed. Simon, an undertaker,
embalms his father and is facing his own death. Louisa, Simon’s mother, makes peace with her husband over his dead body in a cooler in the basement of the funeral home. Simon contemplates the
mystery of death over a plate of spaghetti cacio e pepe in Rome with an Italian undertaker. The dog, Maya who works as a greeter at the funeral home where she comforts those who are grieving
hardest eventually makes the truth about death known to Elizabeth, Simon’s wife. New Yorker cartoons keep the family laughing during the most difficult months, so Simon decides to submit his
own (included here), leading Elizabeth to seek further clarification in a meeting with the New Yorker cartoon editor, Bob Mankoff, at his office. The serious issues cleverly addressed in The
Truth About Death are touched with warmth, humor, and deep feeling in the eight "Other Stories," not by invoking comforting fairy tales but by accepting the fact that death and grief are part
of the natural order of things. As Maya explains to Elizabeth, "It’s just the way things are.""--