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Death Is Hard To Live With
Teenagers Talk About How They Cope With Loss
by Janet Bode
Through interviews with teenagers who have experienced the death of a friend or relative, Janet Bode explores ways of making peace with the shock, guilt, and tragedy of death. Young adults who feel defeated can learn through these examples and, by reading what worked tor their peers, discover that they, too, can find a way to cope. A guide for young people who are coping with family and peer death presents interviews with teenagers who have suffered similar losses, offering advice on coming to terms with pain, guilt, and resuming life. |
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The Music in Your Brother’s Name
An Open Letter to My Surviving Children
by Vicki W. Vanderveen
This is the poignant insight into one mother’s grief following the sudden death of her oldest child. Through poems and letters, the author addresses each of her five children and details how their three-year old brother’s death impacted their lives. |
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Straight Talk About Death for Teenagers
How to Cope With Losing Someone You Love
by Earl A. Grollman
In a unique prose-poem format utilizing aphorisms and quotation fragments, Grollman speaks directly and effectively to the hearts and minds of teenagers who are coping with the death of a friend or family member. Sage advice and worldly wisdom from an author who understands both teenagers and grief. It is almost impossible to find a guide that helps teenagers cope with grief. Today’s young people, who face tremendous and complex pressures even without the trauma of death, need more guidance than anyone in times of tragedy. Award-winning author Grollman fills this need with this compassionate book written especially for teens. |

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