‘Saturday Night Windows’

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Though there are a few continuity confusions, author Becky Aikman tells a story of sharp loss, fog, love and fighting one’s way to a new normal. She does it through a year spent with five one-time strangers who were also “too young” to be widows, their separate situations and their emotional repair. Along the way, Aikman looks at scientific studies on grief here and in other cultures, and how both genders deal with loss.

Did I mention that I loved this book? I did, for its humor, its help, and for its heart.

This is obviously not a dark memoir, and I daresay it’s not for your widowed granny, either. It’s sad, it’s happy, and, in fact, once you start “Saturday Night Widows,” you won’t be able to part with it.

Terri Schlichenmeyer is a book reviewer from West Salem, Wis. She may be contacted at bookwormsez@yahoo.com.

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