THE REVEREND RICHARD COLES is a writer, broadcaster and an Anglican priest. He co-presented Saturday Live on BBC Radio 4 for a number of years and appears, from time to time, on QI, Have I Got News For You and Would I Lie To You? He has won Christmas MasterChef, Celebrity Mastermind twice, and captained Leeds to victory in Christmas University Challenge in 2019. A contestant on Strictly Come Dancing (2017) and a third place finalist on I'm a Celebrity... Get Me Out of Here! (2024) he exhibits huge bravery. He writes regularly for the Sunday Times, and is the author of half a dozen books, including a bestselling autobiography, Fathomless Riches, and the bereavement bestseller The Madness of Grief, written after the death of his partner, David Coles. The first three books in the Canon Clement series have all been No.1 Sunday Times bestsellers.
Beautiful, honest and massively comforting
*DAWN FRENCH*
Immensely moving and disarmingly witty
*NIGELLA LAWSON*
Will strike a chord with anyone who has grieved . . . shines with
the sort of wry, self-analytical wisdom you might expect from
Coles. Full of resonating reflections, ones that urge us all to be
kinder, to love more strongly
*INDEPENDENT*
Such a moving, tough, funny, raw, honest read. The beautiful
articulation of Richard's grief will be a comfort to so many
*MATT HAIG*
Captures brilliantly, beautifully, bravely the comedy as well as
the tragedy of bereavement . . . simultaneously heartwarming and
heartbreaking, painful and strangely comforting as it confronts the
reality of what happens to us all in the end
*THE TIMES*
Beautifully written, moving and gut-wrenching, but also at times
very funny, each smile and laugh a candle in the dark
*IAN RANKIN*
An astonishingly brave, bold and honest book about the tragedy -
and unexpected comedy - of bereavement. Such a harrowing, hopeful
and comforting book. If I could prescribe Richard Coles, I'd
administer him stat to us all
*Dr Rachel Clarke, author of DEAR LIFE*
This is not a self-help book on how to cope with death and loss, it
is an honest, raw and personal account of a man's descent into the
Madness of Grief. Richard provides a frank account of the trials
and tribulations he endured during the weeks between the death and
the funeral of the man he loved. Funny, sad, touching and thought
provoking, it reminds us that grief has no normality, no time limit
and most importantly, no rules
*PROFESSOR DAME SUE BLACK, author of ALL THAT REMAINS*
Bold, intimate writing . . . THE MADNESS OF GRIEF is not a manual
for the bereaved, but as a vivid account of how it feels when the
world suddenly falls away, it performs another kind of service
*THE SUNDAY TIMES*
Deeply moving . . . has an immediacy that is not born of long
reflection and it is all the better for it
*FINANCIAL TIMES*
Heartbreakingly sad and searingly honest . . . For those who find
themselves bereaved, this book is sure to help
*DAILY MIRROR*
You don't need to be religious to find comfort in this book.
Anybody who has experienced a similar complex grief will relate to
many of Coles's anecdotes
*THE DAILY TELEGRAPH*
In this memoir, Coles shares his truth, stays kind, and, when
possible, brings a smile . . . By reflecting the hurts of others'
losses with such beauty and integrity, he confirms that it is his
open humanity that is priestly. It gives me yet another reason to
admire him
*CHURCH TIMES*
An honest book, and a brave one
*THE OLDIE*
Moving and candid, this book will resonate with anyone who has lost
a loved one, or has had to cope with someone they love whom they
just cannot help
*I NEWSPAPER*
Although not a self-help book, the homilies, experience and
catharsis within creates invaluable solace. It will resonate for
the myriad struggling with grief wrought by the pandemic
*THE QUIETUS*
Beautifully written, raw and deeply personal . . . A revealing and
often funny insight into love and loss
*ATTITUDE*
This brief, wise, frank book deals with the surreal mundanity of
bereavement
*THE DAILY TELEGRAPH, Books of the Summer*
His reading is pitch-perfect . . . creating an aural kaleidoscope.
It is, at heart, a meditation on the nature of loss and one that is
as strangely comforting as it is wrenching and painful
*FINANCIAL TIMES, Audio Books review round up*
A WORTHY heir to C. S. Lewis's 'A Grief Observed'... To be in
Coles's company is always uplifting, even when he's writing about
unbearable sadness and loss.
*DAILY MAIL, Best Books of 2021*
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