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A Grief Observed

Paperback

|

01 June 2013

|

CS Lewis

4.5
Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars
4 Reviews
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In this highly personal account, C S Lewis relates his experience of intense grief - his "mad midnight moment" - after the death of his wife Joy. With candour and insight, Lewis reflects on the faith-shaking effects of bereavement, and affirms the enduring power of God's steadfast love. A Grief...

In this highly personal account, C S Lewis relates his experience of intense grief - his "mad midnight moment" - after the death of his wife Joy. With candour and insight, Lewis reflects on the faith-shaking effects of bereavement, and affirms the enduring power of God's steadfast love.

A Grief Observed comprises the reflections of the great scholar and Christian on the death of his wife after only a few short years of marriage. Painfully honest in its dissection of his thoughts and feelings, this is a book that details his paralysing grief, bewilderment and sense of loss in simple and moving prose.

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In this highly personal account, C S Lewis relates his experience of intense grief - his "mad midnight moment" - after the death of his wife Joy. With candour and insight, Lewis reflects on the faith-shaking effects of bereavement, and affirms the enduring power of God's steadfast love. A Grief...

In this highly personal account, C S Lewis relates his experience of intense grief - his "mad midnight moment" - after the death of his wife Joy. With candour and insight, Lewis reflects on the faith-shaking effects of bereavement, and affirms the enduring power of God's steadfast love.

A Grief Observed comprises the reflections of the great scholar and Christian on the death of his wife after only a few short years of marriage. Painfully honest in its dissection of his thoughts and feelings, this is a book that details his paralysing grief, bewilderment and sense of loss in simple and moving prose.
A Grief Observed $24.99
Koorong code 381192
ISBN 9780571290680
Pages 64
Publisher Faber & Faber
Publication date 01 June 2013
Dimensions 5 x 126 x 198mm
Weight 0.07kg
4.5
Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars
4 Reviews
Delivery
Expected to ship in 2-4 days. Learn more.
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4.5
Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars
Based on 4 reviews
Total 5 star reviews: 2 Total 4 star reviews: 2 Total 3 star reviews: 0 Total 2 star reviews: 0 Total 1 star reviews: 0
100%would recommend this product
4 reviews
  • A
    Anonymous
    I recommend this product
    Rated 5 out of 5 stars
    3 years ago
    Honest and insightful

    This slimline book offers a rare insight into Lewis' experience of personal bereavement. His reflections on loss and faith are painfully honest-he gives voice to fears and doubts about God that most of us would be afraid to admit. Lewis' inner wrestling are sure to resonate with all who have endured significant loss, not just bereavement but loss of personhood, loss of connection and loss of faith.

  • A
    Anonymous
    I recommend this product
    Rated 4 out of 5 stars
    6 years ago
    Well worth the time

    Thought-provoking and frequently relatable. Helpful in the sense that one feels less alone with an understanding that others have suffered similarly, and have found their way through the suffering.

  • A
    Anonymous
    I recommend this product
    Rated 5 out of 5 stars
    9 years ago
    In Memory of H

    A collected series of journals from Lewis mourning the death though not idolizing the memory of his wife Joy Davidman and the process of severing all the connections and roads that lead to her in his mind. He wonders where and what God is in the process also. I liked the insights particularly tackling the idolatry in grief (which he also tackles in parts of """"The Great Divorce"""") though I don't grieve with his symptoms when I have grieved, being in a fear-like feeling for instance. I haven't read """"Spirits In Bondage"""" which Lewis wrote after World War I but I'm thinking about doing so to see how he handled that grief and comparing it with this.

  • A
    Anonymous
    I recommend this product
    Rated 4 out of 5 stars
    10 years ago
    Solidarity not answers

    This isn't a book that offers answers to those who are grieving. Rather it offers solidarity. Lewis questions and grapples with what it feels like (rather than what it means) to grieve the death of a loved one. He is raw, emotional and breath-takingly honest. His theology is not perfect and this book does not come to a tidy conclusion. It is the journal of a man in deep pain. Would I recommend it to a person who is weeping the passing of a family member or friend? Perhaps not straight away. But it is a book that ought to be read at some point, if only because Lewis manages to articulate what we all feel but dare not say. In the words of William Nicholson says,""""We read to know we're not alone. """"\\r\\nAt approximately 70 pages, it won't take much time to read.