Lori Tucker-Sullivan is a freelance writer and editor whose work has appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, Modern Loss, and Passages North. Her essays "Detroit, 2015" and "Time, Touch, and a Whales Grief" were both nominated for a Pushcart Prize and listed as a Notable Essays in the Best American Essays series. Since her husbands death, Lori has written of the widowhood experience at the blog The Widows Apprenticeship. She is also a former bookselling professional who until recently served as Executive Director of the Independent Booksellers Consortium, Inc. She lives in Detroit, MI.
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Reviews
Beyond providing poignant, behind-the-scenes insights into the lives of famous musicians and the women who loved them, I Cant Remember If I Cried serves as a survival guide for anyone dealing with loss and grief.
— Jas Obrecht, Talking Guitar
A wide range of readers and book clubs will appreciate this moving, healing, and absorbing memoir/music history.
— (Starred Review); Library Journal