The Book of the Dead: A Cultural History of the Afterlife is a sweeping exploration of humanity's most enduring mystery—what happens after we die. Drawing from the spiritual traditions, mythologies, and rituals of cultures across the globe, Johann Bachmann offers a deeply insightful and respectful look at the ways people have confronted mortality through time.
From the elaborate funerary rites of ancient Egypt to the cyclical concepts of reincarnation in Hinduism and Buddhism, from Abrahamic visions of Heaven and Hell to the ancestral reverence of Indigenous peoples, this book delves into the rich tapestry of belief systems that shape how we understand death and what lies beyond.
More than a historical survey, this is a cultural, psychological, and philosophical reflection on the universal human experience of loss, grief, and spiritual longing. Bachmann brings together sacred texts, anthropological insights, and deeply human questions in a guide that is both scholarly and accessible, reverent and revelatory.
Whether you are curious, grieving, questioning, or simply seeking a broader perspective on the afterlife, this book invites you to journey through centuries of wisdom and wonder.
Chapters Include:
- Confronting Mortality: A Global Perspective
- Ancient Egyptian Beliefs and Practices
- Reincarnation and Karma in Eastern Traditions
- Heaven, Hell, and Judgment in the Abrahamic Faiths
- Ancestral Spirits and Indigenous Perspectives
- The Psychology of Death and Grieving
- Modern Views: Science, Secularism, and Near-Death Experiences
- The Future of the Afterlife: Digital Immortality and Beyond
- Rituals of Transition: Global Funeral Practices
- The Afterlife as Mirror: What Death Reveals About Life
Length: Approx. 350 pages / ~95,000 words
Share This eBook: