The Best Grief Books of All Time

Discover the most influential grief books, recommended by leaders, experts, and readers worldwide

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Recommendations by Tim Cowlishaw, Kristin Chenoweth, Laura Fitton, Bridget Phetasy and 76 others

Not sure what to read? Our AI can suggest the most recommended Grief books!

1
Book Cover of Megan Devine - It's OK That You're Not OK

By Megan Devine – Psychotherapist and bestselling author (you?) 

4.94
| 2017 | 280 Pages
Recommended for: 
Grieving individuals, those supporting grieving individuals. Beginner to Intermediate readers.
You will:
  • Acknowledge and love better to support oneself and others in grief.
  • Understand the impact of grief and manage it through practical exercises.
  • Shift focus from grief as a problem to be solved to an experience to be tended.
  • Recognize the critical role of acknowledgment and companionship in grief.
  • Learn to live with skill and compassion during grief, building a life alongside it.
  • Grief is not a problem to be solved; it’s an experience to be carried.
  • There are losses that rearrange the world. Deaths that change the way you see everything, grief that tears everything down.
  • There is not a reason for everything. Not every loss can be transformed into something useful.
Reviews:
Insightful Approach
Universal Insights
Practical Exercises
Refreshing Take
Honesty
  • #1 Best Seller in Coping with Suicide Grief on Amazon
  • New York Times Bestseller
  • Featured on NPR's RADIO TIMES and WISCONSIN PUBLIC RADIO
  • Rated Amazon Best Book of the Year
Recommended by Laura Fitton, Natalie Weaver, Jack Kornfield and 9 others
Laura Fittoni can't say enough good things about refugeingrief's work.
i frequently send her book "It's OK that You're Not OK" to loved ones (it helped me so much).
she's inspiring here on Twitter, and she has a community and wonderful range of resources at
Natalie WeaverI'm so sorry for your loss. I'm sending you so much love. I have this book, and It's a great reminder to start reading it finally
Jack KornfieldGrief support and understanding that is heartfelt, straightforward, and wise
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2
Book Cover of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie - Notes on Grief

By Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie – Best-selling novelist and author of We Should All Be Feminists (you?) 

4.94
| 2021 | 80 Pages
Recommended for: 
General readers seeking insights into grief and personal loss. Beginner to Intermediate readers.
Reviews:
Insightful
Personal
Hopeful
Emotional
Universal
Short
Expensive
  • #91 Best Seller in Grief & Bereavement on Amazon
Recommended by Kimberly D. Manning, Leslie Gray Streeter, Sarah Broom and 10 others
Kimberly D. Manning2/
Though it may seem silly to some, the minute I finished my second reading of “Notes on Grief” I headed straight to Audible to see if there was an author’s narration. And there was.
Gasp.
The only thing better than the book was hearing Adichie read it herself.
Breathtaking
Leslie Gray StreeterElegantly spare . . . brutally frank . . With raw eloquence, Notes on Grief is both achingly personal and stunningly familiar to anyone who has felt the ‘permanent scattering’ [of grief]. Written and published less than a year after her father’s death, Adichie’s pain on these pages is so palpable that one can almost taste its bitterness. She captures the bewildering messiness of loss in a society that requires serenity, when you’d rather just scream. Grief is impolite . . . Adichie’s words put welcome, authentic voice to this most universal of emotions, which is also one of the most universally avoided
Sarah BroomThis intimate work implores, jerks us out of callousness, moves grief closer . . . Notes on Grief lays a path by which we might mourn our individual traumas among the aggregate suffering of this harrowing time. Our guide, Adichie, is uncloaked, full of ‘wretched, roaring rage,’ teaching us how to gather our disparate selves and navigate the still-raging pandemic. In the texture of many of these sentences you can almost feel where the writer has resisted bearing down with her refining tools—language and memory—so as to allow her emotional reality to remain splintered and sharp. Adichie is a consummate world-builder . . . Over the course of these 30 fragments, we witness a shift in perspective, an assurance that whatever comes next will never have been created before
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Grief Book made by AI

By TailoredRead – AI that creates personalized books for you 

4.98
| 2025 | 30-300 pages
Learn Grief faster with a book created specifically for you by state-of-the-art AI. Our AI has vast knowledge of Grief, and will craft a custom-tailored book for you in just 10 minutes. This tailored book addresses YOUR unique interests, goals, knowledge level, and background. Available for online reading, PDF download, and Kindle, your custom book will provide personalized insights to help you learn faster, expand your horizons, and accomplish your goals. Embark on your Grief learning journey with a personalized book - made exclusively for you.
Recommended for: 
All readers across all knowledge levels.
You will:
  • Get a Grief book tailored to your interests, goals, and background
  • Receive a book precisely matching your background and level of knowledge
  • Select which topics you want to learn, exclude the topics you don't
  • Define your learning goals and let your book guide you to accomplish them
  • Get all the knowledge you need consolidated into a single focused book
Reviews:
Insightful
Focused
Highly Personalized
Easy to Read
Engaging
Actionable
Up-to-Date
3
Book Cover of Dr. Joanne Cacciatore, Jeffrey Rubin - Bearing the Unbearable: Love, Loss, and the Heartbreaking Path of Grief

By Dr. Joanne Cacciatore – Zen priest, founder of the MISS Foundation (you?) and 1 more 

4.84
| 2017 | 248 Pages
Recommended for: 
Grief counselors, therapists, social workers, clergy, educators, academics, medical professionals. Beginner to Intermediate readers.
You will:
  • Understand the grieving process deeply and compassionately
  • Learn coping strategies for profound grief
  • Discover insights on transforming grief into love and connection
  • Understand the importance of honoring grief and its impact on humanity
  • Learn how grief can open hearts to connection and compassion
Reviews:
Informative
Compassionate
Insightful
Supportive
Well-Written
Heavy
Intense
  • #5 Best Seller in Grief & Bereavement on Amazon
  • Foreword INDIES Award-Winner: Gold Medal for Self-Help
Recommended by Amel Karboul, Gabor Mate, Mary Neal Vieten and 9 others
Amel KarboulMaybe one advice is: drop the wish for it to end soon or to move on. I know it sounds maybe not helpful short term. But grief is a process and shortening it now may lead to it becoming a bigger problem long term. One book I found very helpful:
Gabor MateIn this poignant, heartrending, and heart-lifting book, Joannne Cacciatore teaches how loss is transformed to peace, devastating grief to active and practical love. Beautifully, beautifully written, Bearing the Unbearable is for all those who have grieved, will grieve, or support others through bereavement
Mary Neal VietenAt a time when even the most normal of human experiences, such as grief and suffering, are being pathologized and medicated by a bio-psychiatric industry, Bearing the Unbearable is an honest and courageous examination of the most common of human experiences…Dr. Cacciatore’s powerful book doesn’t stop with delineating the process of grief. [It] shows grieving human beings how to reclaim the process as normal and sacred, and how to insist on defining the process for themselves, which leads to powerful healing…This book will become a staple in my practice, and as well as at Warfighter ADVANCE programs
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