HOW TO GRIEVE LIKE A VICTORIAN
Amy Carol Reeves
On Sale Date: December 9, 2025
9781335014061
Trade Paperback
$18.99 USD
ABOUT THE BOOK:
Katherine Center meets
REALLY GOOD, ACTUALLY in a clever and poignant novel about an English Professor
who grieves the sudden loss of her husband the Victorian way, by wearing
widow’s weeds and escaping to London, where she unexpectedly discovers there’s
still love, life, and burlesque to be had.
Dr. Lizzie Wells, a professor
of British Literature and bestselling author, is grieving her husband the
Victorian way. She keeps a lock of his hair in a choker around her neck and
dons widows weeds–and notifies her colleagues and students that she will accept
only paper letters instead of email.
But then she’s offered a trip
to London for escape and healing, where she befriends fellow bestselling
novelist AD Hemmings. Rakish and handsome, Hemmings pushes her out of her
comfort zone. She attends a Victorian-style séance, gets pulled onstage at a
burlesque bar, and sight-sees with her young son.
All the while, back in South
Carolina, her late husband’s best friend and lawyer, Henry, peels back the
layers of a family secret her mother-in-law is desperate to keep hidden.
Cross-Atlantic ‘family business’ updates turn into regular FaceTime hangouts
and their friendship evolves into something more. Lizzie fears she’s falling in
love with him…
Struggling with conflicting
feelings, Lizzie travels to Brontë country where in the windswept moors she
comes to peace with grief, joy, and all the in-betweens.
Think: If Emily Henry wrote about a young widow in the vein of Really
Good, Actually (irreverent, hot-mess heroine) and Lessons in Chemistry
(female academic thrust into a commercial space; struggling as a single mom)
with a warm-blanket romantic HEA, and loads of snark.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
AMY CAROL REEVES has a PhD in nineteenth-century British literature and finds joy in teaching classes and writing. She's published several academic articles as well as a young adult book trilogy about the Jack the Ripper murders in Victorian London. She lives in a quirky old house in Indianapolis with her three children. www.amycarolreeves.com
SOCIALS:
Website: https://www.amycarolreeves.com/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/amycarolreeves/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AmyCarolReeves?ref_type=bookmark
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4968653.Amy_Carol_Reeves?from_search=true&from_srp=true
BUY LINKS:
Bookshop.org: https://bookshop.org/p/books/how-to-grieve-like-a-victorian-amy-carol-reeves/dc4ab8a28b7af14e
Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Grieve-Like-Victorian-Carol-Reeves/dp/1335014063
OUT OF OFFICE REPLY—
Thank you for contacting me. However, for
an undetermined time period, I will only be corresponding through letters.
(Yes, the kind with paper.) Thank you for understanding.
Dr. Lizzie Wells
Professor of Victorian
Literature—Willoughby
College
Author of The Heathcliff Saga
she/her
After typing the message, I drum my
fingers on my desk, contemplating the elegant stack of black-and-gold-rimmed
stationery pages and envelopes in front of me. They seem appropriate for a
recent widow like me, and I’m grateful for the niche Etsy shop specializing in
antique stationery.
No more emails.
The thought of not reading or answering
campus emails from hateful asshats like Bill Rhodes, chair of philosophy, feels
like a giant fucking albatross has slid from my shoulders, feathers cluttering
the floor of my coffee-stained office carpet.
Since Philip’s sudden death last month,
I’ve learned I don’t have much headspace other than to parent and grieve. And
I’ve barely time to parent. Heathcliff ate a Pop-Tart for breakfast this
morning. A chocolate Pop-Tart, not even a fruit one. I couldn’t
summon the energy to cook his regular oatmeal.
What am I going to do?
I look up at the signed Heathcliff
Saga movie poster on the wall behind my desk and stare into the glassy blue
eyes of teen heartthrob Everett Dane. He sneers rakishly, dark hair tousled
over his forehead, rumpled shirtsleeves open to reveal the top of his Greek-god
chest. He played the role well.
When Hollywood optioned film rights for
my Twilight-y young adult version of Wuthering Heights—written
during sleepless nights breastfeeding Heathcliff—Philip had been so proud. He
took me out to a too-expensive restaurant, the kind where the servers wear
crisp, ironed white dress shirts and say ridiculous things like the wine has
“hints of leather and tobacco.” We split a bottle of cabernet over a large
platter of roasted duck and asparagus. We even splurged on the overpriced
cranberry tartlets; the cranberries, of course, were “raised in organic,
sun-kissed hills near Asheville.” After dinner, we walked through a nearby
pocket park. The evening sky glowed rose-hued beyond the sprawling Carolina
oaks; Philip skillfully skipped rocks across a tiny, landscaped pond as we talked
about a future where we could pay off student loans and take our long-postponed
trip to Paris.
My email dings, and I jump, blinking away
tears.
Against my better judgment, I check the
message.
Ugh.
Brad McGregor.
Hey Miss Wells,
I’m really struggling with P and P. I
mean I thought this chick lit was like more straightforward. But geez . . . why
do they have to write so many letters? Can I like have extra credit or
something if I don’t pass the Final?
Thks
B
My blood pressure rises a little bit every
time I have to deal with Brad McGregor. The dean’s son needs one more English
credit to graduate on time, so he enrolled in my spring Jane Austen seminar
because it was the only literature class over before his “epic” Cancún vacation
funded by his dad’s bloated administrative salary. His sense of entitlement has
no end. He makes little effort to disguise his distaste for my class. He
addresses me as “Miss” instead of “Dr.” And last, but not least, he’s
Willoughby College’s most notorious man-slut; last year he cheated on one of my
brightest students, Kayla, with her dorm RA. (Kayla sobbed during my office
hours after she found out.)
I log out of my email, close my laptop,
pull out one of my new stationery pages and a black fountain pen, and begin a
furious response to Brad. A soft rap on my door, and my department chair,
Patrick, enters, steam wafting from the top of his Edgar Allan Poe mug.
“Letters only?”
“This first one is going to Brad
McGregor.”
“He’s the worst.” Patrick groans
and takes a sip of coffee as he slumps in the worn leather armchair opposite my
desk. “I had him in American lit last semester. He came to class smelling like
weed, called Edith Wharton a frigid old spinster, and I’m pretty sure he slept with
my TA.”
I see red as I stare down at my angry
letter.
Patrick’s quiet. Although my age,
thirty-nine, he sports a graying beard. He strokes it for a few seconds as he
considers me worriedly. He’s trying not to look at my new black blouse with
ruffled wrist sleeves and black pencil skirt. I might have gone on a
widow shopping spree for black clothes in the days after Philip’s death.
Patrick doesn’t need to know about the small silver bird keepsake urn
containing Philip’s ashes in my leather satchel. That might make me too
peculiar.
He clears his throat awkwardly and gazes
into his coffee.
“You doing okay, Lizzie? I mean . . . I
know you’re just back from leave, but you can take more time . . .” I wave my
hand dismissively. “Everything will be worse if I don’t work. It will be
all-day pajamas, and tears, and bingeing Outlander episodes.”
“Well, if there’s anything I can do for
you—watch Heathcliff, send takeout . . . If there’s anything I can do to
lighten your load, just let me know. I’ve already taken you off the Curriculum
Management Committee and the Committee Oversight Committee.”
“Thanks,” I mutter, bewildered, as
always, at how my studies of Brontë and Dickens novels prepared me for such
gripping daily tasks.
I shift the topic away from me and my
ongoing sadness. “Did you have your meeting with the provost today?”
He gives me the dismal summary of this
month’s meeting. Each monthly provost report becomes a little more doomsday
than the one before, and the jumpy junior faculty start sending out résumés to
community colleges and local high schools. In our department, we just lost a
fairly new full-time hire to a neighboring new technical school. (Teaching
business writing is more lucrative . . . she’d said. I had no
counterargument.) Now the tiny English department is just me, Patrick, a small
army of adjuncts, and our MAGA-supporting administrative assistant, Sandra.
(Every time I pass her desk, I try not to look at the framed illustration of
Jesus sitting on a bench by the White House.)
“But it looks like Willoughby will stay
open for at least another year?” I ask.
He shrugs. “Let’s just say I’m keeping my
résumé updated.” He glances up at Everett Dane’s searing blue eyes. “You,
on the other hand, will have plenty of options should the ship sink.”
It’s true. Although The Heathcliff
Saga hadn’t exactly made me rich, as the only faculty member to appear in People
magazine, I’m a reluctant darling to a struggling institution. And plenty
of other schools will take me if we close.
After he leaves, I finish penning my
letter to Brad. I worry it’s a bit too harsh, so I slip it into my bag. I can
always revise later.
I take a late lunch outside, numb after
the latest Fiscal Oversight Committee meeting, where the provost announced
proudly that she was siphoning off 90 percent of the humanities department
budgets for an Admissions Advancement Task Force. Her lipstick-rimmed
Cheshire-cat grin stretched wider, looking directly at me as she said it.
Everyone waited breathlessly for me, the committee chair, to retort. Instead,
in front of all thirty faculty and ten administrators, I pulled my favorite
lavender-scented ChapStick from my sweater pocket next to Philip’s miniature
keepsake bird urn. I applied it thoroughly and carefully amid the silence,
snapped the cap back on, and said nothing just to show how few fucks I give
anymore.
Alone, in the campus garden, I sit on a
mossy stone bench in the shade of an oak. Bees hum loudly through the blue flag
irises and bulblike pink blossoms of the small magnolia near me. I open my
Tupperware dish of macaroni casserole. As a Midwest transplant, I’m always
amazed at Southerners’ culinary zest for the grieving. I have about twelve
macaroni casseroles and five lasagnas in my freezer. Heathcliff can’t digest
dairy, so I’ll be eating these myself in the forthcoming weeks.
Even in the shade, my armpits sweat in
this Carolina May heat. Still, I’d choose this over my windowless office any
day. Through the garden gate, I see Bill Rhodes storming into the
administration building—no doubt to unload on the president about me and
Patrick. I can’t care. No one will ever option film rights for his latest book—Metaphysical
Intellectualism in Neoclassical England.
Last fall was such a bright star for me
when The Heathcliff Saga film premiered and my book spent several weeks
on the New York Times bestseller list. Writing that book six years ago,
postpartum, kept me sane. I gave everyone A’s that semester. With
the hormone shifts, lack of sleep each night and an insatiable
Heathcliff hanging off my breast, I’d escape into my alternative Wuthering
Heights world. In my book, Emily Brontë’s love-triangled teenagers
learn that Heathcliff inherited warlock powers from a distant Yorkshire
ancestor. My Linwood is less milquetoast than the original character. He
bastardizes ancient Fae supernatural powers from the moorlands and
starts a spell war with Heathcliff. Cathy, caught in the middle, asks
Nelly Dean to train her in the supernatural arts. She teams up with Heathcliff,
helping him purge Linwood’s magical darkness for good. There’s lots of
teen angst, desperate kissing, and disengaged parents. The adults churn
butter and argue with no idea their teens could destroy Great Britain
with their dark fairy arts war.
My literary agent, Sarah, took me on and
sold the book in two days. I loved my editor, my only complaint being that he
wanted to change the title from The Cathy Saga to The Heathcliff Saga.
I groused. After all, I wanted my heroine to be the book’s star. But he said
“Cathy” wasn’t distinct enough—it sounded like the comic-strip character—and he
wanted my Heathcliff to be the new Edward Cullen.
Then I thought about my forthcoming
advance check and gave in. The timing couldn’t have been better. Over the next
few years, film rights sold, then foreign rights in Spain, Germany, and Japan.
By the time the movie came out last year and I had my red-carpet moment,
Willoughby’s president offered me immediate tenure and a promotion.
Putting the lid on my Tupperware, I scroll
fondly through my Instagram page. Thanks to the movie, I have about 100,000
followers, and I pick up a few hundred more every time one of the stars tags
me. My last Instagram post was a repost of Everett Dane’s pic of him hugging me
at the premier after-party: “Love this woman! Brainiest person
I’ve ever known.”
I’m suddenly back in that moment, slight
champagne buzz, surrounded by the glamorous and Botoxed. I wore a rented teal
Vera Wang and teetered on strappy gold Jimmy Choos; I was in this young British
heartthrob’s arms, and yet I locked eyes with Philip, standing just beyond the
photo’s edge. With his soft, sandy blond hair and glasses, my shy lawyer
husband never seemed more mine than in that moment. He wasn’t a crier—ever.
It’s a weird Southern guy thing. But his eyes shined happy tears. There was no
professional or personal jealousy there; it was pure celebration of me, of us—of
how profoundly lucky we were to have each other and that moment.
My phone dings.
Mirabel: Hi Elizabeth, you’ve been on my
mind so much. Lunch tomorrow? My treat☺
I groan.
My Steel Magnolia,
passive-aggressivemother-in-law has been trying to get me out to lunch since
the funeral. Lunch. I stare down at my Tupperware of mostly uneaten macaroni.
Apparently, the grieving have to eat.
There’s been a persistency in her texts.
Something’s off.
And I just can’t even with her because it
will make me think of that night—Philip
was leaving her house when his car ran
off the road.
There was the call from him, just before
the accident. The voicemail he left: My god, Lizzie, we have to talk.
The spongy casserole feels like a lump in
my stomach. I’d rather face ten meetings with Bill Rhodes than think about that
night and all the factors involved: rain, lightning, deer, emotional shock, the
million random sparks that might have made Philip’s 2017 black Camry slide off
the road between Summerville and our home in Columbia, South Carolina. But
painful as it might be, I need to know what happened at her home to upset
Philip. Mirabel’s been acting cagey, and I’ll have to tread carefully.
My mother-in-law loves her azalea
gardens, her large home, the Methodist Women’s League. She likes lipsticks and
Talbots dresses.
Unfortunately, the one thing Mirabel
doesn’t like (besides me) is the truth.
Excerpted
from How to Grieve Like a Victorian by Amy Carol Reeves. © 2025 by Amy
Carol Reeves, used with permission from Canary Street Press, an imprint of
HarperCollins.



No comments:
Post a Comment