Human beings are grieving animals and consolation, an experiential assemblage through which grief is ameliorated or assuaged, is an age-old response to loss, expressed variously in different cultural contexts. However, in the contest of the West, over the course of the past century, consolation has dropped off the cultural radar, reduced in popular usage to the notion of ‘second prize’ rather than any positive agential process. It might seem that we don’t ‘do’ consolation any more, and Western models of bereavement in the twentieth century typically privileged coping with loss as a linear progression towards ‘closure’. The contributions to this volume highlight this relative neglect of consolation in Western popular and academic discourses ...