Notes for the Everlost: A Field Guide to Grief
By (Author) Kate Inglis
Shambhala Publications Inc
Shambhala Publications Inc
18th September 2018
12th September 2018
United States
General
Non Fiction
155.6463
Paperback
208
Width 140mm, Height 216mm
Part memoir, part handbook for the heartbroken, this powerful, unsparing account of losing a premature baby will speak to all who have been bereaved and are grieving, and offers inspiration on moving forward, gently integrating the loss into life. Part memoir, part handbook for the heartbroken, this powerful, unsparing account of losing a premature baby will speak to all who have been bereaved and are grieving, and offers inspiration on moving forward, gently integrating the loss into life. Inglis's story is a springboard that can help other bereaved parents-and anyone who has experienced wrenching loss-reflect on emotional survival in the first year; dealing with family, friends, and bystanders post-loss; the unique survivors' guilt, feelings of failure, and isolation of bereavement; and the fortitude of like-minded community and small kindnesses. Inglis's unique voice-at once brash, irreverent, and achingly beautiful-creates a nuanced picture of the landscape of grief, encompassing the trauma, the waves of disbelief and emptiness, the moments of unexpected affinity and lightness, and the compassion that grows from our most intense chapters of the human experience.
Notes for the Everlostis the most beautifully written book I have read in ages, and a great deal more besides: comforting, and sad; full of riddles and wisdom; an unsparing map of grief, with its stubborn terrain and dark jokes and switchback heartbroken roads. This book is great company for terrible times.Elizabeth McCracken, author of Thunderstruck & Other Stories
Kate Inglis is a wise, flexible, and ultimately hopeful guide through the inhospitable country of mourning. She is also fiercefiercely angry, fiercely funny and, most of all, fiercely loving.Katherine Ashenburg, author of The Mourners Dance
Highly recommended for anyone in the throes of grief, recent or past.Library Journal(starred review)
Inglis gently shows bereaved parents what at first is unimaginable: that their grief will not always be suffocating, and that, while they will always be bereaved parents, with absence a reminder of what might have been, they will also come to be 'countless other things.'Foreword Reviews
An emotional and thought-provoking mix of poetic prose, memories, and beliefs on death, loss, and grief.Kirkus Reviews
Kate Inglis has written this delicate, playful handbooksomething between a bereavement memoir and a self-help guidefor people who feel they might disappear into grief forever.Times Literary Supplement
In Notes for the Everlost, Inglis uses the raw story of her loss to speak directly to other bereaved parents. She doesnt offer them useless or insensitive advice or pretty platitudes, as people sometimes do. Instead, she invites them to honor their grief and assures them that whatever theyre feelingdepression, rage, guilt, jealousyis normal. Highly recommended not only for bereaved parents but for anyone who knows someone who has faced such a loss and doesnt know how to act or what to say in the face of their suffering.Lion's Roar
A mother's story on losing her son, but also a lyrical connection to all who have grievedand a work of deep humanity.Spirituality & Health
KATE INGLIS is an author and photographer living on the South Shore of Nova Scotia. She is the author of numerous YA and children's books, including If I Were a Zombie, Flight of the Griffons, and The Dread Crew, which was nominated for Hackmatack Children's Choice and Red Cedar Awards. Kate's writing through the birth of her twins, subsequent loss, and beyond was internationally recognized and widely shared. In 2008, she founded Glow in the Woods, a groundbreaking online community for bereaved parents that attracted over five million readers within its first five years. She served as its editor until 2012, and she still writes as a contributor. For six years she headlined the annual Walk to Remember in Edmonton, Alberta, one of the largest and most preeminent memorial events for bereaved parents in Canada. Each year, she delivered a keynote to more than 1,000 parents and family members who had experienced loss. In 2012, she gave a talk at TEDx Halifax called "Parallelism," in which she explored of the similarities between the often solitary journeys of creative work and healing from grief.