bookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcover
bookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcover
bookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcover
bookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcoverbookcover
The Mash-Up Americans

By The Mash-Up Americans

Grief, Collected Bookshelf

Welcome to a new series about grieving and life  from The Mash-Up Americans.  Grief, Collected is  where we explore how grief moves through our bodies, our families, and our communities — and why we need to feel it all in order to transform our future. 

 

Grief, like joy, is one of our human conditions. Yet it is the one we, as Americans, are the least willing to confront, even as it becomes more and more essential to do so. We prize pushing forward, but maybe it’s time to pause. As we emerge from the catastrophic losses of the pandemic — and wrestle with the regular traumas of modern life — how do we heal ourselves to plant seeds for our future? What wisdom can we call upon to  create hope for a more introspective, joyful, and honest culture? 

 

We’re talking to leading psychologists, researchers, musicians, and authors, including George Bonnano, Natalia Skritskaya, Daniela Gesundheit, Alexander Chee, Linda Thai, Dorothy Holinger, Wendy Macnaughton, Rabbi Danya Ruttenberg, and adrienne maree brown.  

 

GriefCollected.com

bookcover for The Best American Essays 2022

The Best American Essays 2022

Robert Atwan, 

Alexander Chee 

$17.99

$16.73

bookcover for Sun in Days: Poems

Sun in Days: Poems

Meghan O'Rourke 

$15.95

$14.83

bookcover for A Grief Observed

A Grief Observed

C. S. Lewis 

$17.99

$16.73

bookcover for Grievers: (Grievers Trilogy, Book 1)

Grievers: (Grievers Trilogy, Book 1)

Adrienne Maree Brown 

$15.00

$13.95

bookcover for Emergent Strategy: Shaping Change, Changing Worlds

Emergent Strategy: Shaping Change, Changing Worlds

Adrienne Maree Brown 

$19.00

$14.89

bookcover for Pleasure Activism: The Politics of Feeling Good

Pleasure Activism: The Politics of Feeling Good

Adrienne Maree Brown 

$20.00

$18.60

bookcover for How to Say Goodbye

How to Say Goodbye

Wendy Macnaughton 

$19.99

$18.59

bookcover for Alive at the End of the World

Alive at the End of the World

Saeed Jones, 

D. a. Powell 

$16.95

$15.76

bookcover for The Queen of the Night

The Queen of the Night

Alexander Chee 

$16.99

$15.80

bookcover for Man's Search for Meaning

Man's Search for Meaning

Viktor E. Frankl, 

William J. Winslade, 

Harold S. Kushner 

$16.00

$14.89

bookcover for Happy-Go-Lucky

Happy-Go-Lucky

David Sedaris 

$29.00

$26.97

bookcover for The Refugees

The Refugees

Viet Thanh Nguyen 

$16.00

$14.88