Kathleen Horan lost two loves in two weeks. First, she broke up with her boyfriend of three years. Two weeks later, her dad died. Writing her dad's obituary provided some peace and comfort as she grieved his passing.

"It felt good to dig around the facts of his life and remember favorite things," recalls Horan. "Writing his obituary got me to focus on his whole life, not just the ending of it."

She wondered if writing an obit about her dead relationship would help, as well. It did, she discovered.

Pleased and relieved, Horan, a radio reporter for NPR affiliate WNYC-FM in New York, set up a website, www.relationshipobit.com, for others to post. She launched it with a fun funeral for dead relationships, featuring breakup songs, a drink called "Break-Up" and a coffin filled with breakup stories.

Within a day of its launch, hundreds of people had posted obits of dead relationships. And they kept coming. There were so many that Horan, 40, compiled the best of them -- changing names, of course -- into a book released this month called "Relationship Obits: The Final Resting Place for Love Gone Wrong" (HarperOne, $13.99).

"I hope that it can be sort of a condolence card for people going through a breakup," Horan says. "I think it could be helpful and also provide a little comic relief because there's so much humor mixed in with the sadness."

From the chapter "Cause of Death: Cowardice": "An autopsy of the remains reveals what had long been suspected but never confirmed by the couple: that Brett and Camille were each suffering from chronic illnesses that made the death of their relationship inevitable. Brett had been a life sufferer of Cowardice, a condition that obliterates the spine and shrinks the testicles."

From "Cause of Death: General Meanness and Complete Insanity": "It started badly and ended worse. ... I will not miss his ability to suck the fun out of everything. He excels at it. He could suck the fun out of the word fun!"

There are about 1,000 obits posted on the site. She offers an outline for writing your own relationship obit at the end of the book, but points out that there are no hard and fast rules -- only that it reflect the relationship as much if not more than the pain.

"Not being overly one-sided helps a lot -- even if it's clear which side is responsible for the obit -- it's still more pleasurable to read if it's not just a pity party," Horan says. "Also, details! All the unique and specific details that only your relationship had gives it fingerprints, so to speak, and makes it all the more fascinating."

Horan says the death of relationships ought to have rituals just as other deaths. The grieving process has similar phases, she notes, including disbelief, anger and, finally, acceptance.

"You feel so alone when you're going through a breakup," she says. "Seeing that many others are going through it, too, helps."