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If you liked Good Grief, try these:
The Garden of Small Beginnings
by Abbi Waxman
Published May 2017
Read ReviewsNot since Good Grief has a book about a young widow been so poignant, funny, original, and utterly believable. A compelling debut novel about loss.
by Leslie Pietrzyk
Published Jan 2017
Read ReviewsWinner of the 2015 Pitt Drue Heinz Literature Prize.
by Helen Garner
Published Feb 2010
Read ReviewsA powerful, witty, and taut novel about a complex friendship between two womenone dying, the other called to care for herfrom an internationally acclaimed and award-winning author.
by Lorna Landvik
Published Sep 2008
Read ReviewsThe View from Mount Joy, Lorna Landviks delightfully quirky and intensely moving new novel, is about a man, a supermarket, the roads not taken, and the great, unexpected pleasures found in living a good life.
by Cheryl Strayed
Published Jan 2007
Read ReviewsA family founders after a mother's death in this beautifully observed debut. Cheryl Strayed has a deep appreciation for the shifting rhythms between siblings and parents and for the beautiful terrors of learning how to keep living. The wonderful characters in Torch come alive and ...
Revenge Of The Middle-Aged Woman
by Elizabeth Buchan
Published Jan 2004
Read ReviewsFull of humor, clever insight, and a whimsical sense of the absurd - an irresistible and finely written fantasy for anyone who ever wondered what a certain age would look like from beyond the looking-glass.
by Fannie Flagg
Published Jun 2003
Read ReviewsThe time is 1946 until the present. The town is Elmwood Springs, Missouri. Once again, Flagg gives us a story of richly human characters, the saving graces of the once-maligned middle classes and small-town life, and the daily contest between laughter and tears.
Welcome To The World, Baby Girl
by Fannie Flagg
Published Dec 1999
Read ReviewsOnce again, Flagg's humor and respect and affection for her characters shine forth.
Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood
by Rebecca Wells
Published May 1997
Read Reviews"Wells' voice is uniquely her own, funny and generous and full of love and heartbreak, in that grand Louisiana literary tradition of transforming family secrets into great stories"
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