Bye Bye I Love You Audiobook By Michael Erard cover art

Bye Bye I Love You

The Story of Our First and Last Words

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Bye Bye I Love You

By: Michael Erard
Narrated by: Stephen Caffrey
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With our earliest utterances, we announce ourselves—and are recognized—as persons ready for social life. With our final ones, we mark where others must release us to death's embrace. In Bye Bye I Love You, linguist and author Michael Erard explores these phenomena, commonly called "first words" and "last words," uncovering their cultural, historical, and biological entanglements and honoring their deep private significance. Erard draws from personal, historical, and anthropological sources to provide a sense of the breadth of beliefs and practices about these phenomena across eras, religions, and cultures around the world.

What do babies' first words have in common? How do people really communicate at the end of life? In the first half of the book, Erard tells the story of first words in human development and evolution, and how the attention to children's early language—a modern phenomenon—arose. In the second half, he provides a groundbreaking overview of language at the end of life and the cultural conventions that surround it. Throughout he reveals the many parallels and asymmetries between first and last words and asks whether we might be able to use a linguistic understanding of end of life to discover what we truly want.

©2025 The Massachusetts Institute to Technology (P)2025 Tantor Media
Communication & Social Skills Personal Development Social Sciences Sociology
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Boring. Dry. Not relatable. Too much jargon and not enough that connects. Introduction is a great example of excessive words without making a point.

Not the best read / listen

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The narrator… reads and pauses… in weird… places, and it makes it very hard… to listen to.

I couldn’t get past chapter 1 because it’s so frustrating to try to follow the syntax with all the pauses.

I may still pick up the hardcopy of this book though .

Might be interesting if the narrator could read better

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