Good Grief by Lolly Winston

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: April 2004
  • 344pp

    Reader Rating: (92 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Writing Style" See All

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: April 2004
    • Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
    • Format: Hardcover, 344pp

    Synopsis

    The brilliantly funny and heartwarming New York Times bestseller about a young woman who stumbles, then fights to build a new life after the death of her husband. 36-year-old Sophie Stanton loses her young husband to cancer. In an age where women are expected to be high-achievers, Sophie desperately wants to be a good widow'a graceful, composed Jackie Kennedy kind of widow. Alas, Sophie is more of a Jack Daniels kind. Downing cartons of ice-cream for breakfast, breaking down in the produce section of supermarkets, showing up to work in her bathrobe and bunny slippers'soon she's not only lost her husband, but her job and her waistline as well. In a desperate attempt to reinvent her life, Sophie moves to Ashland, Oregon. But instead of the way it's depicted in the movies, with a rugged Sam Shepherd kind of guy finding her, Sophie finds herself in the middle of Lucy-and-Ethel madcap adventures with a darkly comic edge. Still, Sophie proves that with enough humor and chutzpah, it is possible to have life after loss.

    The Washington Post - Ann Hood

    Sophie's funny, lopsided view of the world gives emotional depth to the story, and it is what makes Good Grief stand out from other novels that tackle this enormous subject. Winston does not shy away from the pain of mourning, but she reminds us that we can still be funny, sarcastic, aware and smart, even when we are brokenhearted.

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    Biography

    A former copywriter and PR exec turned writer (her first foray into freelance journalism was as a stringer for Automotive News), Lolly Winston has found her niche as a novelist with Good Grief -- "one of the best first novels I have ever read," according to fellow fiction writer Anne Rivers Siddons.

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    Customer Reviews

    Not what I expectedby Anonymous

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    August 15, 2009: It starts out with funny quips and so you think you are going into a light hearted book about grief. You are not, it's one more book about faith and God and all the things that as a new widow I don't care about. For me the old adage of "If there's a God, why did he do this", "if Faith can move mountains,why did my faith disappear? I realize it could not have been that strong (according to some) but I did believe in God and the church and all of that until the love of my life was gone in a flash. I really did look to this book as being uplifting and light and funny...............it's not. It's just another one of the same

    Couldn't put it down!!!by Anonymous

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    January 21, 2009: The cover is what first attracted me to the book. It certainly sparked my curiosity.
    I must confess, I purchased the book and put it in my night stand with a stack of other books waiting to be read.
    I am a busy mother of 5. I picked it up looking for a little brain candy and couldn't put it down. I was upset with myself for waiting so long to pick it up.
    Lolly has a wonderful way of describing her character "quotes" . She has them answer questions and make statements, and then has a lovely way of describing what they are really thinking. Like life. We all try to say the appropriate thing while we are really thinking something completely different.
    With all of her characters weighing life circumstances, they go through all the stages of feelings. Anger, denial, self pitty, and always never to little to late, HOPE!
    Would recommend this to anyone for a realistic well written and pleasure to read story.
    Very Believable.

    I Also Recommend: Sam's Letters to Jennifer.


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