Grief rarely arrives with permission. It crashes in, consumes everything familiar, and leaves behind a silence that words struggle to touch. In the Eye of Grief is an intimate, unfiltered account of that silence and of the slow, fragile process of learning how to live within it.
Written during the first year after losing someone deeply loved, this book is not a guide that promises closure or neat answers. It is a lived record of grief as it unfolds in real time raw, confusing, overwhelming, and deeply human.
A Journey Through Loss and Survival
In the Eye of Grief began as a therapeutic act. Charlene Farrell did not sit down to write a book. She wrote to survive. What emerged is a deeply personal journey through the shock of loss, the weight of absence, and the quiet ways in which one learns to breathe again.
The narrative captures grief not as a single emotion, but as a shifting landscape. Some days are heavy with sorrow. Others are filled with anger, guilt, numbness, or fleeting moments of peace that feel almost undeserved. The honesty of this portrayal makes the book resonate far beyond personal experience.
Blending Narrative and Poetry
One of the defining strengths of this book is its form. It moves fluidly between reflective prose and poetry, allowing emotion to surface in the way it naturally wants to.
The narrative sections offer context, memory, and reflection. The poems give voice to what cannot be explained. Together, they mirror how grief itself functions sometimes coherent, sometimes fragmented, often beyond logic.
Poetry becomes the author’s language of survival, a place where pain can exist without needing resolution.
Themes of Coping and Walking With Grief
While the book is rooted in personal loss, it gently extends its reach to others who grieve. It speaks about coping not as fixing pain, but as learning how to carry it. It explores how to sit with grief rather than outrun it, and how to support others without trying to make their pain disappear.
There is no pressure to heal quickly. No expectation of strength. Instead, the book validates grief as something that deserves time, patience, and compassion.
The Author’s Perspective
Charlene Farrell is a counselling psychologist and educationist based in Goa, with years of experience working closely with emotions across age groups. Yet this book does not speak from a professional distance. It speaks from the raw vulnerability of a daughter grieving her father.
Her love for her father, his struggle with illness, and the devastation of losing him form the emotional core of the book. Writing became her form of therapy, her way of staying afloat when language itself felt inadequate.
With no formal training in poetry or creative writing, her voice remains unpolished in the best way possible honest, direct, and deeply felt.
Book Details
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Title | In the Eye of Grief |
| Author | Charlene Farrell |
| Language | English |
| Print Length | 156 pages |
| Publication Date | 9 November 2025 |
| Reading Age | 15 years and up |
| Genre | Grief memoir, poetry, healing |
| Buy Link | https://amzn.in/d/05R2BPcu |

Who This Book Is For
This book is for anyone who has lost someone and felt unprepared for the aftermath. It is for those in the early days of grief and for those years into it who still feel the ache linger.
It is also valuable for caregivers, counsellors, educators, and anyone who wants to understand grief not as a concept, but as a lived emotional reality.
Final Reflection
In the Eye of Grief does not try to teach readers how to move on. It shows how to stay present with loss, how to honor love even after death, and how expression can become a lifeline when everything else falls away.
This is not a book that rushes healing. It sits with pain. And in doing so, it offers something rare a quiet companionship for those navigating the loneliest terrain of the human experience.
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