![]() ![]() “Paul’s decision to look death in the eye was a testament to not just who he was in the final hours of his life but who he had always been,” she wrote in the epilogue. They picnic, bring flowers and, as Kalanithi wrote in the epilogue to When Breath Becomes Air, she rubs the grass “as if it were Paul’s hair.” The setting is majestic, with a view of the Pacific Ocean just a few miles away. But they still visit Paul’s grave, nestled at the edge of a field in the Santa Cruz Mountains. Lucy Kalanithi and daughter Cady, now 5, have moved to a new home. It’s been five years since Paul Kalanithi’s death. It spent 68 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list and has been translated into 39 languages. ![]() Lucy Kalanithi, MD, speaks with contributing editor Paul Costello about the death of her husband, Paul, five years ago and how she and their daughter, Cady, keep his memory alive. ![]()
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