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Grief Is Love: Living with Loss

A trusted grief expert shares advice on how to navigate the loss of a loved one in this incisive and compassionate guide: "calm, lucid prose... humanizing exploration of coping with the life-changing tides of loss" (Kirkus Reviews).

In Grief is Love, author Marisa Renee Lee reveals that healing does not mean moving on after losing a loved one--healing means learning to acknowledge and create space for your grief. It is about learning to love the one you lost with the same depth, passion, joy, and commitment you did when they were alive, perhaps even more. She guides you through the pain of grief--whether you've lost the person recently or long ago--and shows you what it looks like to honor your loss on your unique terms, and debunks the idea of a grief stages or timelines. Grief is Love is about making space for the transformation that a significant loss requires.

In beautiful, compassionate prose, Lee elegantly offers wisdom about what it means to authentically and defiantly claim space for grief's complicated feelings and emotions. And Lee is no stranger to grief herself, she shares her journey after losing her mother, a pregnancy, and, most recently, a cousin to the COVID-19 pandemic. These losses transformed her life and led her to question what grief really is and what healing actually looks like. In this book, she also explores the unique impact of grief on Black people and reveals the key factors that proper healing requires: permission, care, feeling, grace and more.

The transformation we each undergo after loss is the indelible imprint of the people we love on our lives, which is the true definition of legacy. At its core, Grief is Love explores what comes after death, and shows us that if we are able to own and honor what we've lost, we can experience a beautiful and joyful life in the midst of grief.
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192 pages

Average rating: 7.5

6 RATINGS

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2 REVIEWS

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Community Reviews

Anonymous
Feb 21, 2024
6/10 stars
More memoir than any specific research or tips on addressing your grief. I appreciate the BIPOC perspective - most (all?) other books I’ve read on grief are written by white authors. I listened to it in a short timespan and it felt a bit repetitive at times - may feel different if you read it slowly over time. I do a lot of work in grief and loss, so nothing revolutionary in these pages that I hadn’t read before. It’s a short read and could be helpful to someone who just experienced a death.
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Mreid
Oct 28, 2022
10/10 stars
Phenomenal....each word is precisely where it needs to me. Inspirational and motivational. Did not want to put down.
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