Love at a Funeral and Other Awkward Conversations

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Pub Date 31 May 2024 | Archive Date 11 Jun 2024

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Description

Death is an awkward matchmaker…

 

When my brother suddenly passes away, shattering my family, I’m left to pick up the pieces. 

 

Then Vince Mancini knocks on my door. My brother’s best friend from high school—and the boy I loved—is a funeral director, and he promises to answer whenever I call. 

 

With his steadfast nature and warm smile, he becomes the anchor in the storm, willing to hold me up as everything falls at my feet. He sees through all my bluster, and it’s easy to remember why I’d hung on his every word when I was younger. 

 

Now, he thinks he can fix me, even though there’s a lump of clay where my heart used to be. 

 

Which makes the fluttering in my chest all the more disconcerting. And this hurt? It’s too much too soon. 



Death is an awkward matchmaker…

 

When my brother suddenly passes away, shattering my family, I’m left to pick up the pieces. 

 

Then Vince Mancini knocks on my door. My brother’s best friend from high...


Available Editions

ISBN 9781957580586
PRICE US$4.99 (USD)
PAGES 320

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Average rating from 71 members


Featured Reviews

This book is one that is going to stick with me for a while. It’s such a beautifully written story that follows the journey of grief after the FMC’s brother dies, mixed with a little bit of romance. Sophie Andrews does a magnificent job of making the reader feel what the main character is feeling and even when I had to put the book down, I was still thinking about it. It was a very realistic portrayal of the ups and downs of grief and the romance was able to add to the story and didn’t take away from Cass’s journey. This is not a book I’d normally pick up, but I’m so happy I did.

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Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for the opportunity to read an advance copy of this book.

Keep your tissues handy, readers, you're in for an emotional ride. Is there romance involved? Yes, but don't think of this as your typical romance, This is a book about grief, and it is so wonderfully written, you'll almost forget this is fiction. It belongs on the self-help shelves, too, as a guide to grieving. You just want to give Cass a big hug and tell her that one day she'll be ok. Except that she's not a hugger :) Her emotional growth throughout the story was so beautiful to read. Is this also wickedly funny at times? Sure is.

Unfortunately for me, I also lost my big brother very unexpectedly, not in these exact circumstances, but close enough. And the baseball and Springsteen references hit home. Sophie Andrews' author's note at the end of the book made my cry the most. It's true, this is not a club to which you want to belong. Thank you, Sophie, for bringing this book into my life. (I hope you include the bonus Vince scene in the final version!) Would give this more than 5 stars.

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I needed this story. I needed it to mirror my emotions and experiences, to help me feel seen. Death isn’t something you can talk about with everyone. Especially the loss of a sibling - your only sibling. Their Raymond, my Rammona. My best friend called her Ray. No one understands. You grew up together. You lose a piece of yourself.

Until I read this novel, I didn’t know how much I needed to experience someone else’s grief. To be able to separate it from my own. To recognize everything I have felt and all I am feeling is absolutely normal.

I could situate myself inside the pages of this book - inside those early scenes. No one talks about these moments. The need to adopt a new vocabulary, past tense. The realization that nothing new will happen again. These are the only photos we’ll ever have. That was the last text she’d ever send. “Thank you.”

Grief…it throws itself at you, and you carry it. I’m still not sure if it ever lets go. I adored the main characters: Vince & Cass. Their love for each other. His capacity for forgiveness and her penchant for being self aware. It was dripping from every scene, yet she still failed to fully see herself.

I adored this story. And I very much appreciate Sophie Andrews for translating her feelings and experiences into an evocative work of fiction, for people like us to experience the collective truth of loss and grief with the added comfort of a happy ending.

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I don’t think I’ve ever loved a book that has made me cry so much! Sophie Andrews’ Love at a funeral and other awkward conversations was a devastatingly beautiful story of grief. I usually steer away from sad stories, but I don’t regret requesting this novel, and I think it will stay with me for a long time. The story is wonderfully written, heart wrenching in places but leaves you uplifted at the end. Cass and Vince’s story was perfectly intertwined to keep from overwhelming the reader with sadness. I definitely recommend reading! Thank you to NetGalley and Sophie Andrews for the ARC!

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“I thought I needed to be strong for everyone else. But by putting others’ grief ahead of my own, I unintentionally made it worse for myself. I self-destructed. And, sadly, I think it may be true for a lot of people who experience the death of a sibling. The putting others ahead of yourself, not the self-destructing part. What you experience with your sibling during your time together can span from black eyes to fits of laughter to screaming matches to “Hey, give me five bucks for a beer.” The connection between siblings is established from birth, and even though it can often be tenuous, it’s undeniable. We may not be burying our parents, children, or spouse, but our loss is just as great. Different, but significant. It’s a pain that deserves moments to say, “I’m not okay.”

Thank you to the Author and NetGalley.com for the Advanced Reader Copy.

Oh my gosh. When I say cried and cried and cried and the most therapeutic way possible throughout this book is an understatement. As an older sister, with 1 blood related brother who is currently living his best life — I could still relate so heavily to the messages shared through the story.

What do you do when your whole world is collapsing while simultaneously getting heavier on your shoulders? Cass walks us through that with the help of her brother’s childhood bestfriend who is also the local funeral home owner protégé. She comes to so many different realizations along her journey but not before hitting several rock bottoms due to self-destructive behavior.

I could not recommend this book enough. Will be buying a copy for my shelf as soon as it is published and adding all of the authors other books to my TBR 🫶🏼✨ To the top of my 2024 highest rated list it goes.


*** note to author, I did find a grammatical error at the 7% mark — He’s boy I used to love when I was a girl who had nothing but dreams in her head and hearts in her eyes. —-

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