A woman with brown curly hair lying in a field of dry grass, wearing a light yellow dress with spaghetti straps.

The End of The Breaking

Unexpected Poet

Lia G is a poet, writer, and storyteller, currently based in Dallas.

She moves between the corporate world and creative work, resisting the

idea that a life can-or should-be contained within a single role.

Born and shaped across continents, her work examines identity, love and

illusion, loss, and the shadow self-tracing what remains after war-marked

childhood. Blending stark realism with mythic undertones, her voice is intimate and raw.

The End of the Breaking marks her debut.

SHOP

The End of the Breaking — Signed Special Edition
$22.99

A signed collector's edition of The End of the Breaking by Lia Green.

Written over years of becoming and unbecoming, The End of the Breaking is a poetry collection for those who have loved too deeply, survived what should have broken them, and emerged transformed.

Blending modern poetry with mythic undertones, Lia Green explores love, grief, identity, resilience, and the complicated beauty of starting over. These poems move between heartbreak and healing, loneliness and wonder, asking what remains after the breaking—and what new things become possible because of it.

This special edition includes a hand-signed copy by the author, making it a meaningful keepsake for readers who wish to own a more personal piece of the collection.

For anyone who has ever rebuilt themselves from the ruins of a former life, this book is both a companion and a reminder:

sometimes the end of the breaking is the beginning of becoming.

Follow the Plot in Real Time

A poem titled 'The End of the Breaking' with a black and white drawing of a serene woman with braids, a headdress, and celestial symbols surrounding her.
A page from a book or magazine featuring a poem titled 'Midnight poem,' with a black illustration of a crow or raven at the bottom right corner.
A poem titled 'We Choked Our Love to Death' next to a drawing of a noose fashioned from a twisted rope.
A poem titled 'Come over twelve years ago' with a simple line drawing of legs with a crossed foot and no upper body, on the right side of the page. The poem is written in black text and the page number 66 is at the bottom right corner.
A poem titled 'After the Bottom' on a white page, with a drawing of a sunflower in the top right corner and a small illustration of cherries in the bottom right corner.

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