If you lost someone to suicide and the second year is harder than the first, this book was written for you.
Most grief resources focus on the acute phase: the shock, the first months, the first year.
The Second Year is for what comes after. For the grief that doesn't follow the rules. For the questions that still circle at three in the morning. For the exhaustion of carrying something, most people around you have stopped asking about.
You are not doing this wrong. You are carrying one of the most difficult forms of grief that exists.
Suicide loss bereavement is categorically different from other kinds of loss. It comes loaded with unanswerable questions, with stigma, with a timeline that deepens rather than fades. Research consistently shows that grief after suicide intensifies in the second year, not because something has gone wrong, but because the numbing mechanisms of the first year are finally lifting.
The Second Year is the grief guide that addresses this specific territory honestly, without false comfort and without clinical distance.
INSIDE THIS BOOK:
Grounded in the best available research in suicide bereavement: built around the experiences of survivors who know this territory firsthand, The Second Year offers what most grief resources don't: honest, sustained company for the long road past the first year.
This book does not offer stages, silver linings, or the promise of closure. It offers something rarer and more useful: the truth about where you are, and a path, however winding, toward a different kind of okay.
For suicide loss survivors. For those who love them. For anyone navigating grief after suicide who needs to know they are not alone.