





Pretty Painful Grief Letters
For when grief is too big for words
We are beyond excited to be the first Australian stockist for this amazingly honest and raw book.
Grief is brutal. It doesn’t follow rules. It doesn’t come with instructions. It just crashes into your life and changes everything. Pretty Painful Grief Letters is a raw, vulnerable, and painfully honest collection of letters that put language to the feelings most people don’t know how to say out loud – written for those moments when the silence is too loud, when the ache is too much, when you just need to feel seen.
This book is for you if:
You're tired of people telling you to "move on."
You're craving something that feels real in the middle of all this pain.
You want a place to unload the stuff that’s too hard to say out loud.
You're ready to start acknowledging your grief — without shame or pressure.
It's for all those that cry in the shower, drive in silence, reread old texts, and feel like strangers in their own skin. It’s for the ones who are grieving someone they’ll never stop loving, as you try to figure out how to live a life that doesn’t look or feel like it used to.
For when grief is too big for words
We are beyond excited to be the first Australian stockist for this amazingly honest and raw book.
Grief is brutal. It doesn’t follow rules. It doesn’t come with instructions. It just crashes into your life and changes everything. Pretty Painful Grief Letters is a raw, vulnerable, and painfully honest collection of letters that put language to the feelings most people don’t know how to say out loud – written for those moments when the silence is too loud, when the ache is too much, when you just need to feel seen.
This book is for you if:
You're tired of people telling you to "move on."
You're craving something that feels real in the middle of all this pain.
You want a place to unload the stuff that’s too hard to say out loud.
You're ready to start acknowledging your grief — without shame or pressure.
It's for all those that cry in the shower, drive in silence, reread old texts, and feel like strangers in their own skin. It’s for the ones who are grieving someone they’ll never stop loving, as you try to figure out how to live a life that doesn’t look or feel like it used to.