
At Oprah Daily Burlock tagged "six memoirs that make grief feel a tiny bit less lonely," including:
Things in Nature Merely Grow, by Yiyun LiRead about the other memoirs on the list.
Mothers who outlive their children often inhabit a world of hushed silences and euphemisms. Written in the aftermath of losing both of her teenage children to suicide, Li’s memoir strides confidently through a territory we are told to tiptoe in and fills a void of language with booming insight. A few days after James, Li’s nineteen-year-old son, took his life using the same method that his brother had six years before, the acclaimed author told a friend, half-jokingly, that she would “write a self-help book about radical acceptance.” The book she ended up writing could hardly be classified as “self-help.” As Li warns the reader early on, it “will not provide the easy satisfaction of fulfillment, inspiration, and transformation.” But these pages—refreshingly absent of platitudes, false optimism, or an ounce of self-pity—provide something far more useful: a vision of maternal grief that is both unvarnished and, ultimately, survivable.
--Marshal Zeringue









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