Come What May: Life-Changing Lessons for Coping with Crisis from the UK's leading emergency planner and bestselling author - as heard on Desert Island Discs

AN UPLIFTING GUIDE TO NAVIGATING HARD TIMES, PERFECT FOR FANS OF DR JULIE SMITH AND JULIA SAMUELS


'An unlikely superhero' Sunday Times



'An amazing woman' James O'Brien


'Easthope is that rare thing, a genuine philosopher thinking through what she is doing in the mitigation of human suffering' New Statesman


We all know that at some point in life, we will experience pain, uncertainty and loss. Widowhood, redundancy, a life-changing diagnosis, pregnancy loss, or a global pandemic. So how can we weather the storms, and cope with whatever comes next?


No one can answer this better than Lucy Easthope, an emergency planner whose job is to support survivors of major disasters. She has been there after countless earthquakes, fires and floods. Time and again she has watched how people rebuild: the work, the pitfalls and the fragile joy. In Come What May, she distils for us what she has learned about how to carry on during and after terrible times.


Through poignant stories and hard-won wisdom, she offers a roadmap for resilience in the face of adversity. She explains what shape the recovery journey might take, how to triage your life in an emergency, how to plan for 'the slump' (also known as the lasagne phase), how to take stock of what has happened to you, how to watch out for 'learned helplessness', and what good (and bad) help looks like.


This is a book for all of us existing in 'the after' who want not just to survive, but to live and unleash strengths we never knew we had.

1146466405
Come What May: Life-Changing Lessons for Coping with Crisis from the UK's leading emergency planner and bestselling author - as heard on Desert Island Discs

AN UPLIFTING GUIDE TO NAVIGATING HARD TIMES, PERFECT FOR FANS OF DR JULIE SMITH AND JULIA SAMUELS


'An unlikely superhero' Sunday Times



'An amazing woman' James O'Brien


'Easthope is that rare thing, a genuine philosopher thinking through what she is doing in the mitigation of human suffering' New Statesman


We all know that at some point in life, we will experience pain, uncertainty and loss. Widowhood, redundancy, a life-changing diagnosis, pregnancy loss, or a global pandemic. So how can we weather the storms, and cope with whatever comes next?


No one can answer this better than Lucy Easthope, an emergency planner whose job is to support survivors of major disasters. She has been there after countless earthquakes, fires and floods. Time and again she has watched how people rebuild: the work, the pitfalls and the fragile joy. In Come What May, she distils for us what she has learned about how to carry on during and after terrible times.


Through poignant stories and hard-won wisdom, she offers a roadmap for resilience in the face of adversity. She explains what shape the recovery journey might take, how to triage your life in an emergency, how to plan for 'the slump' (also known as the lasagne phase), how to take stock of what has happened to you, how to watch out for 'learned helplessness', and what good (and bad) help looks like.


This is a book for all of us existing in 'the after' who want not just to survive, but to live and unleash strengths we never knew we had.

12.99 In Stock
Come What May: Life-Changing Lessons for Coping with Crisis from the UK's leading emergency planner and bestselling author - as heard on Desert Island Discs

Come What May: Life-Changing Lessons for Coping with Crisis from the UK's leading emergency planner and bestselling author - as heard on Desert Island Discs

by Lucy Easthope
Come What May: Life-Changing Lessons for Coping with Crisis from the UK's leading emergency planner and bestselling author - as heard on Desert Island Discs

Come What May: Life-Changing Lessons for Coping with Crisis from the UK's leading emergency planner and bestselling author - as heard on Desert Island Discs

by Lucy Easthope

eBookDigital original (Digital original)

$12.99 

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Overview

AN UPLIFTING GUIDE TO NAVIGATING HARD TIMES, PERFECT FOR FANS OF DR JULIE SMITH AND JULIA SAMUELS


'An unlikely superhero' Sunday Times



'An amazing woman' James O'Brien


'Easthope is that rare thing, a genuine philosopher thinking through what she is doing in the mitigation of human suffering' New Statesman


We all know that at some point in life, we will experience pain, uncertainty and loss. Widowhood, redundancy, a life-changing diagnosis, pregnancy loss, or a global pandemic. So how can we weather the storms, and cope with whatever comes next?


No one can answer this better than Lucy Easthope, an emergency planner whose job is to support survivors of major disasters. She has been there after countless earthquakes, fires and floods. Time and again she has watched how people rebuild: the work, the pitfalls and the fragile joy. In Come What May, she distils for us what she has learned about how to carry on during and after terrible times.


Through poignant stories and hard-won wisdom, she offers a roadmap for resilience in the face of adversity. She explains what shape the recovery journey might take, how to triage your life in an emergency, how to plan for 'the slump' (also known as the lasagne phase), how to take stock of what has happened to you, how to watch out for 'learned helplessness', and what good (and bad) help looks like.


This is a book for all of us existing in 'the after' who want not just to survive, but to live and unleash strengths we never knew we had.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781399736220
Publisher: Hodder
Publication date: 05/15/2025
Sold by: Hachette Digital, Inc.
Format: eBook
Pages: 288
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Lucy Easthope is the UK's leading authority on recovering from disaster. She has been an advisor for nearly every major disaster of the past two decades, including the 2004 tsunami, 9/11, the Salisbury poisonings, Grenfell, the Covid-19 pandemic and most recently the war in Ukraine. She challenges others to think differently about what comes next after tragic events, and how to plan for future ones. Lucy grew up in Liverpool and has a degree in law, a PhD in medicine and a Masters in risk, crisis and disaster management. She is a Professor in Practice of Risk and Hazard at the University of Durham, a Fellow in Mass Fatalities and Pandemics at the University of Bath and a Research Associate at the Joint Centre for Disaster Research, Massey University, New Zealand.
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