Five of the best books about grief

Moving memoirs and a magic-realist novella are among these stories that can help provide comfort and perspective

When it comes to grief, a list of a thousand books wouldn’t be enough. This small selection is offered in the hope that it might contain something that provides solace – or at least that it might point the way to something that does.

***

Grief is the Thing With Feathers by Max Porter

The premise of this poetic novella – giant crow moves in with bereaved family after mother dies – sounds unlikely. But through this brilliant semi-allegory, Porter captures how loss can upend a family, seemingly stretching space and logic in surreal ways. Told through voices of two boys, their father, and a shapeshifting crow, this is a funny, frightening and loving experiment in magical thinking. As an adult who was bereaved as a child, I approached this tale with some trepidation – fearing it might cut too close. In fact, it provided a kind of fierce comfort – holding pain up to the light, and aslant.

***

Sad Book by Michael Rosen

Grief might not always be beyond words, but it sometimes needs little elaboration. This spare book, written about the sudden death of Rosen’s son, Eddie, illuminates how grief’s complexity can be rendered through seemingly simple words and images. “Who is sad?” , Rosen writes. “Sad is anyone. It comes along and finds you”. This is not strictly a children’s book, but a book that recognises how acutely grief can speak to the child within us. Quentin Blake’s grey wash illustrations create a space for sadness to breathe.

***

You Are Not Alone: A New Way to Grieve by Cariad Lloyd

Guests on Lloyd’s award-winning podcast Griefcast have included those who have experienced the death of a loved one by suicide, those who have lost siblings, children, parents and close friends. Lloyd’s brilliant book draws on excerpts from these podcast interviews, together with her own account of negotiating grief – her father died when she was 15. This is an outward-reaching guide, full of humility and humour. A reading list at the book’s close offers further resources and a “handrail through the grief fog”.

***

Time Lived, Without Its Flow by Denise Riley

Sixteen months after her son’s sudden death, Riley writes of being “superficially ‘fine’” but “with an unseen crater blown into my head”. Moving in diary-like intervals, Riley brings her poet’s skill and formal ice-cold grace to this tender, philosophical account of “an altered condition of life” – the “stopping of time” that occurs after the death of a loved one.

***

Late Fragments: Everything I Want to Tell You (About this Magnificent Life) by Kate Gross

Kate Gross was 34 when she was diagnosed with terminal bowel cancer. She died two years later, when her twin boys were just five years old. Gross wrote this luminously beautiful memoir-cum-commonplace book partly as way of articulating her own grief for the things she would not live to see and partly as a legacy and love letter to those she left behind. A clear-eyed and extraordinarily uplifting book.

Contributor

Sophie Ratcliffe

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Five of the best books about gossip
Cruelty, nosiness, truth-telling: whatever you call it, it appears in every community – and in plenty of works of literature too

Ella Creamer

01, Feb, 2024 @1:05 PM

Article image
Five of the best books about social media
From online courtroom to information manipulation, social media has radically changed communication. Here are five books to help navigate it

Aneesa Ahmed

28, Mar, 2024 @12:40 PM

Article image
Five of the best books about video games
Generations have now grown up with games, but they have long been linked to science fiction and are now the subject of histories, too. Here are five of the best

Keith Stuart

09, May, 2024 @1:11 PM

Article image
Five of the best books about whistleblowers
From the Horizon scandal and Watergate to the blog post that brought down the CEO of Uber, these works of nonfiction throw some light on those brave enough to speak truth to power

James Ball

12, Jan, 2024 @10:00 AM

Article image
Five of the best books about siblings
Our brothers and sisters can be our best friends, our enemies, and everything in between. These stories explore the unique bonds we have with them

Sophie Ratcliffe

11, Apr, 2024 @11:00 AM

Article image
Five of the best books about eating
From a pioneering 1940s ‘gastrography’ to a recent novel about a real-life 18th-century French peasant cursed with an appetite to eat just about everything

Sophie Ratcliffe

02, May, 2024 @11:00 AM

Article image
Five of the best books about fresh starts
A family escapes from drizzly England to Corfu and later life achievements are celebrated in these refreshing reads on new beginnings

Sophie Ratcliffe

04, Jan, 2024 @12:00 PM

Article image
Five of the best books about queer relationships
From James Baldwin to Sarah Waters, writers have been telling rich, nuanced LGBTQ+ tales for decades – here are some good titles to try

Safi Bugel

25, Apr, 2024 @2:47 PM

Article image
Five of the best books about democracy in crisis
From mega-conspiracies to evolutionary biology, these books will help you dissect why political systems go awry

Rafael Behr

07, Mar, 2024 @12:00 PM

Article image
Five of the best books about the UK housing crisis
From costs to quality, housing can make you despair. Our best five books explain the politics behind the problems – and the solutions

Oliver Wainwright

25, Jan, 2024 @1:18 PM