Colgove, M., Bloomfield, H. & McWilliams, P. (1993). How to Survive the Loss of a Love. Los Angeles: Prelude Press.
Fine, Carla (1999). No Time to Say Goodbye: Surviving the Suicide of a Loved One. New York: Main Street Books.
Goulding, Mary (1996). A Time to Say Good-Bye: Moving Beyond Loss. Watsonville, CA: Papier-Mache Press.
Note: For widows and widowers
Grollman, Earl (1989). Talking About Death: A Dialogue Between Parent and Child. Boston: Beacon Press
Note: For parents, to help their children deal with death
Greenspan, Miriam (2003). Healing through the Dark Emotions: The Wisdom of Grief, Fear, and Despair. Boston: Shambhala Publications, Inc.
Ilse, Sherokee (2002). Empty Arms: Coping with Miscarriage, Stillbirth, and Infant Death. Maple Plain, MN: Wintergreen Press.
Larson, Dale G. (1993). The Helper's Journey: Working with People Facing Grief, Loss, and Life-Threatening Illness. Champaign, IL: Research Press.
Rando, Therese (1988). How to Go on Living When Someone You Love Dies. New York: Bantam.
Schiff, Harriet Sarnoff (1991). The Bereaved Parent. New York: Penguin Books, 1987.
Staudacher, Carol. Men and Grief. Oakland, CA: New Harbinger
Tatelbaum, Judy (1984). The Courage to Grieve: Creative Living, Recovery, and Growth Through Grief. New York: Harper & Row.
Walter, Carolyn (2003). The Loss of a Life Partner: Narratives of the Bereaved.New York: Columbia University Press
Hospice.Net
http://www.hospicenet.org
Thorough resouces, including the many following topics:
Patients
- Pain Control: Dispelling the Myths
- Helping Yourself Live While Dying
- Advance Directives
- Relieve Pain Without Medicine
- Medicare Hospice Benefits
- Choosing How To End
- A Dying Person’s Guide To Dying
- Questions About Generic Drugs
- Talking With the Special People
- Nonprescription Pain Relievers
- What Does Someone Dying Need?
Children
- Talking To Children About Death
- Helping Young Surviving Children
- When a Parent Dies
- Children and Grief
- Children's Understanding of Death
- Helping Teenagers Cope with Grief
Caregivers
- How To Be a Supportive Caregiver
- Preparing For Approaching Death
- Keeping Watch
- Coping with Caretaker Anxiety
- Helping a Friend Who Is Dying
- Hard Choices For Loving People
- Family and Medical Leave Act
- Hiring In-home Health
- When a Coworker Is Dying
- The Caregiver’s Journey
- Talking To Children About Death
- Saying Good-bye
Bereavement
- A Guide To Grief
- Helping With the Holidays
- Hospice Spiritual Readings
- Frequently Asked Questions About Grief
- It’s Happening Again
- Knowledge of the Grief Process
- Managing Persistent Fears and Anxieties
- How Do You Know You Are Feeling Better?
- What We Need During Grief
- Affirmations
- The Process of Grieving
- Healing After a Loss
- The Final Journey - Hospice Stories
Online Grief Support - A Social Community - Don't Grieve Alone
http://www.onlinegriefsupport.com
Online groups tailored for specific sub-types of grief and bereavement. Also includes interactive blog entries.
Grieving.Com
http://forums.grieving.com
Online forums for specialized sub-types of grief and bereavement.
Grief Net
http://www.griefnet.org
GriefNet.org is an Internet community of persons
dealing with grief, death, and major loss.
Finding A Support Group
Hospice Foundation of America
http://www.hospicefoundation.org/
Tips for finding a grief support group
The Compassionate Friends: Supporting Family After a Child Dies
http://www.compassionatefriends.org/
Find a local chapter, leave a rememberance in the Memorial Book
National Alliance for Grieving Children
http://childrengrieve.org
The National Alliance for Grieving Children (NAGC) provides a network for nationwide communication between hundreds of professionals and volunteers who want to share ideas, information and resources with each other to better support the grieving children and families they serve in their own communities.
Kid's Aid
http://kidsaid.com
Kids Aid is a safe place for kids to help each other deal with grief and loss. It's a place to deal with feelings in our e-mail support group, to share and view artwork and stories, and for parents and kids to ask questions and find answers.
American Association of Retired Persons (AARP) Resources for Grief & Loss
http://www.aarp.org/relationships/grief-loss/
National Widower's Organization
http://www.nationalwidowers.org
The National Widowers’ Organization provides a virtual toolkit for men coping with the loss of a loved one, a place where men can meet others going through the same transition.
Surviving Suicide Loss
American Foundation for Suicide Prevention
http://www.afsp.org
How to Write an Obituary
http://howtowrite.weebly.com/how-to-write-an-obituary.html
How to Write a Eulogy
http://www.eulogyspeech.net
Twinless Twins
http://www.twinlesstwins.org
Twinless Twins Support Group, International (TTSGI) exists to provide a safe and compassionate community for twinless twins to experience healing and understanding. We provide support for twins and other multiples who have lost their twin due to death or estrangement at any age.
One year plan for writing about your grief and healing
http://www.oneyearofwritingandhealing.com/one_year_writing_and_heal/the-year-at-a-glance.html
One Year of Writing and Healing, a site designed to explore connections between writing and healing--and to facilitate your own exploration. Here, you'll find writing ideas, recommended books, and food for thought, all grounded in a growing body of research on expressive writing and health