
The holiday season can be a time of great joy and celebration, but for those of us who have lost a loved one, it can also be a time of deep grief, loneliness, and sadness. During times of loss, books can be an invaluable source of comfort by helping us to feel seen and heard and providing us with space to reflect on our grief. If you or someone you know is grieving this holiday season, explore these books that provide a sense of hope, healing, and community.
Poetry can open the floodgates of feeling. Turning Toward Grief is a collection of highly accessible and comforting poems on grief and loss, each followed by a brief prose reflection and inviting and welcoming writing prompts. These elements encourage and support readers as they explore the personal images, memories, and emotions sparked by each entry. By paying attention to our grief, we can learn to see it as less threatening, and although it's terribly difficult, we can turn toward our grief in gentle ways each day.
There is no "right" way to grieve; grief is complex and deeply personal. For more than fifty years, Good Grief has helped millions of readers find comfort and hope after loss. This hardcover edition of the timeless classic pairs each stage with a comforting devotional, to allow readers to turn the process of grieving into a spiritual journey.
When we lose someone we love, we are forever changed. Leanne Friesen thought she knew a lot about bereavement, but only when her own sister died from cancer did she learn what grieving people need. In the pages of Grieving Room, Friesen writes with vulnerability, wisdom, and even wit about stark and sacred lessons learned in the face of death. When we lose someone, what we need most is grieving room.
Grieving the loss of a loved one is an experience with many seasons and stages. Winter Grief, Summer Grace helps readers navigate the phases of emotion through the four seasons of the year: winter, spring, summer, and fall. With quotes, poetry, and suggestions, author James E. Miller provides gentle guidance and comfort for those who mourn.
Grief is all-consuming. Shattering. The Spirituality of Grief honors the complex nature of grief and offers simple comfort: we are not alone, and there is no one right way to grieve. Author Fran Tilton Shelton walks us through the questions that gather in the wake of a loved one's death and offers spiritual practices, emerging from a variety of religious traditions, for those who remain. All who love will eventually grieve. Universal and particular, shared and solitary, grief rearranges every aspect of life. But by bringing the resources of spirituality to bear on our losses, we can carry our sorrows rather than silence them.
All the Ways Our Dead Still Speak
What if our dead remain with us? What if closure is not the goal? No matter what you believe about the afterlife, what if the hereafter intersects with the here and now? All the Ways Our Dead Still Speak takes readers on a lyrical and tender quest to encounter the hereafter. Entwining these stories with his own as a sixth-generation funeral director, and with the findings of neuroscience and the solace of faith, Caleb Wilde creates a searching, reverent inquiry into all the ways our dead remain with us.
Grieving the Death of a Mother
Losing a mother is a difficult transition in life, no matter the status of the relationship. In Grieving the Death of a Mother, Harold Ivan Smith guides readers through their grief, from the process of dying through the acts of remembering and honoring a mother after her death. A mother's last breath inevitably changes us. Through wise counsel, Smith speaks gently to people who have gone through this loss and helps those yet to face it. This edition includes a new foreword from the author.
Grieving the Death of a Father
Losing a father can be a complex and confusing transition. Whether a father was beloved or feared, the loss and grief are a process—one that sometimes begins before the physical loss has occurred. In Grieving the Death of a Father, grief counselor and educator Harold Ivan Smith compassionately guides readers through their grief, from the process of dying through the acts of remembering and honoring a father after his death. This edition includes a new foreword from the author.
Grieving the Death of a Friend
Almost everyone will, at some point in their life, suffer the death of a beloved friend. Yet though this experience is just as common as the loss of a father or mother, there are fewer resources for those who experience this devastating and sometimes confusing loss. In Grieving the Death of a Friend, grief counselor and educator Harold Ivan Smith reflects on his own experiences of losing dear friends, as well as the experiences of others, to guide readers through this significant but often unrecognized experience of grief.
The beloved animal companions who walk with us through life are dear and loving friends, as close to us in some ways as family members. For this reason, the death of a pet can bring a powerful sense of grief and loss, as devastating in its own way as any other grief we can experience. Grieving the Death of a Pet treats the loss of a pet with the seriousness and gentleness that it deserves and that pet lovers need, guiding the reader through the initial loss of a pet to the dawning of new hope and reassurance.
Broken Heart, Shared Heart, Healing Heart
Experiencing the death of a beloved pet can be profoundly difficult, and it can be challenging to find real support and comfort during this time. Broken Heart, Shared Heart, Healing Heart acknowledges the deep pain that pet loss causes and offers gentle guidance on how to navigate this difficult time. Grounded in practical advice and research that pet owners can draw on for real help for their broken hearts, this book offers strategies for honoring loss and our own grieving process.
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