Description
In Sorrow's Long Road, Blatchley interweaves an engaging and reader-friendly look at the research on grief with her powerful personal narrative. Beginning with the day of her husband's death, she traces the questions that loss raised and the answers that science provides. Blatchley examines the psychology of love and attachment, detailing how we bond with others and what happens when those bonds are broken. She considers the storm of emotions that the bereaved experience, as well as both the physical and psychological effects of grieving. Blatchley maps out how we adapt to the changes that loss brings and find a new identity afterward. In addition to her own experiences, she shares the stories of other people who have suffered a loss and struggled to recover, illustrating how grief changes over time.
Accessibly written and deeply empathetic, Sorrow's Long Road humanizes the science, showing how psychology and neuroscience can help us make sense of the darkest times in our lives.
About the Author
Barbara Blatchley is professor emerita of psychology and neuroscience at Agnes Scott College. She is the author of What Are the Chances? Why We Believe in Luck (Columbia, 2021).
Reviews
A very personal and candid account of a scientist's grieving process and an impressive attempt to make scientific sense of and understand grief. The major lesson: You will never be who you were before the loss, but most can happily and 'healed' move forward as a new and different person. -- Ad Vingerhoets, author of Why Only Humans Weep: Unravelling the Mysteries of Tears
Book Information
ISBN 9780231222501
Author Barbara Blatchley
Format Paperback
Page Count 224
Imprint Columbia University Press
Publisher Columbia University Press