Reviews

Letters of Note: Grief by Shaun Usher

redfieldstars's review

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dark emotional inspiring sad fast-paced

4.0

northernbiblio's review

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emotional inspiring sad fast-paced

4.0

darflor's review

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emotional reflective medium-paced

4.25

squilvia's review

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dark emotional sad medium-paced

4.0

Beautiful and heartfelt compilation of letters. I found it fascinating how there's no escaping grief for anyone on this earth. For there is love, there will always be grief.

katylizg's review

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emotional sad fast-paced

3.0

diaryofdifference's review

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4.0

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I am so grateful that I had the opportunity to participate on the readalong for Letters of Note: Grief. Huge thank you to the team at Tandem as well as the publisher Canongate Books for sending me a copy of the book to read and review!

Synopsis:

Letters of Note started as a website where Shaun Usher was sharing people’s letters. Now it is a collection of the world’s most inspiring, compulsive and powerful letters, curated into different books based on their topic.

My Thoughts:

When I signed up for the readalong, I didn’t know which topic I will get, and when I got grief, I was a bit let down. I thought to myself – “another book that is sad”. Now, looking back, I am grateful I have read this book, as it allowed me to get closer to my grief and feel emotions I deliberately refused to feel. It also gave me a bit of comfort, an unexpected hug, one of those that you didn’t know you needed.

Through the 31 letters, I felt different people’s sadness of losing someone. I read words of sympathy, empathy, love and joy. For such a short book, it made me feel so much!

My favourite letter is Johann Wolfgang von Goethe’s letter to his grandma, when his grandpa died. My grandpa’s death is still so painful to me – even though it’s been a couple of years now. He died on Christmas Eve, and I never got the chance to say goodbye. On my last visit, I was certain I would see him again. A year later, my grandma passed away as well, and the pain stacked itself on top of the pain I was already feeling.

Is that how grief works? We just keep stacking pain on top of each other like tower blocks through the years… waiting for it to collapse on us? Does it ever go away, or do we always carry it with ourselves? I guess only time will tell…

“It seems to me, that if we love, we grieve. That’s the deal. That’s the pact. Grief and love are forever intertwined.”

I am very grateful for this book. Being able to dive into how other people feel helped me understand my emotions better. Even though, we are never quite ready for grief, and we never fully heal. But without knowing pain and sadness, how will we ever really know happiness?

livinginreview_jode's review against another edition

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emotional hopeful inspiring fast-paced

5.0


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bulletbookreviews's review against another edition

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hopeful informative inspiring relaxing sad

5.0

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