A Hand to Hold in Loss and Sadness - Los Angeles Times
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A Hand to Hold in Loss and Sadness

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Nothing lasts forever. That’s a concept most adults have little trouble with. But just try explaining it to a child, especially a child trying to understand the loss of a parent through divorce, a grandparent through death or even a close friend who simply moved away.

Rabbi Marc Gellman and Msgr. Thomas Hartman offer some real-life suggestions for coping in “Lost & Found: A Kid’s Book for Living Through Loss†(Morrow Junior Books; 176 pages; $15), a comforting and priceless guide for children and their parents.

Gellman and Hartman, who co-host the nationally syndicated cable TV show “God Squad,†previously teamed to write two children’s books (“Where Does God Live?†and “How Do You Spell God?â€) that try to make sense of life’s bigger questions and universal truths. In “Lost & Found,†they draw on the lessons of those two volumes, plus the experiences gained through years of counseling, to offer a profound, yet simple, faith-based philosophy for dealing with grief.

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But the book is, above all, a comforting guide, one that helps us find the silver lining that surrounds even the darkest of clouds.

“It’s often hard to see loss as an opportunity . . . ,†the authors write, “but it is essential. Otherwise, we are left with just the pain of loss and not the lessons we must learn in order to grow.â€

A much more subtle lesson in displaying courage in the face of loss is at the heart of Scott Johnson’s young adult novel “Safe at Second†(Philomel, 242 pages, $16.99), which will be released in June. In it, high school phenom Todd Bannister finds himself trying to choose between college and professional baseball after graduation. But then an on-field injury costs Todd the use of an eye and seemingly ends any hope he has of playing baseball.

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But with the help of his best friend, Paulie, for whom college and professional sports were never an option, Todd discovers that his misfortune isn’t a tragedy as much as it is a blessing in disguise.

Enough about loss. What about gain? For the youngest children, even addition can mean subtraction, as when a new brother or sister arrives to change their lives completely. Joanna Cole helps make sense of that in “The New Baby at Your House†(Mulberry Books, 44 pages, $5.95), a photo-heavy paperback guide that tells kids it’s OK to be angry or resentful when a new sibling arrives. But, Cole says, a brother or sister doesn’t mean you’ve been replaced.

“When a family grows,†she writes, “love grows too.â€

The book opens with a common-sense guide that helps parents make sense of the emotions and frustrations that can lessen the joy of a new addition.

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And finally, in our ongoing attempt to highlight independent authors and small presses of special note, we’d like to call attention to Koeun Heo, author of a delightful story titled “The Flying Frog.†Koeun, however, is better known as a precocious 10-year-old at Wilton Place Elementary School in Los Angeles.

Koeun, who emigrated from Korea seven years ago, was inspired to write her 16-page book about a lonely frog in a wishing well after a trip to the L.A. Zoo. The story is available for $3.95 on the Internet at https://www.1stbooks.com and https://www.1stlibrary.com. Koeun, who gets a cut of the profit, says she’s sold only six copies since the book became available this winter. But that hasn’t discouraged her: She’s written five books since then.

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