Synopsis
Selected as a Heather's Pick by Indigo "A profound and powerful look into the human condition." —David Brooks, New York Times columnist and bestselling author of The Second Mountain "Crittenden's words ring with truth, love, clarity, and courage." —Andrew Solomon, National Book Award-winning author of Far from the Tree and The Noonday Demon -- On a February morning, Danielle Crittenden’s world cleaved in two: the life before her daughter Miranda was found dead in her Brooklyn apartment, and the life after. In Dispatches from Grief, Crittenden maps the landscape of loss with a journalist’s eye and a mother’s heart, chronicling not only the shattering impact of a child’s death but the strange afterlife of grief itself—how it reshapes friendships, routines, and the very sense of self. With unflinching honesty and unexpected grace, Crittenden captures grief in its terrible specificity—the police call, the burial dress, the well-meaning “griefsplaining”—as well as love in its most distilled form. Written with luminous prose and dark humor, Dispatches from Grief is both a singular portrait of loss and a universal meditation on love’s aftermath, offering not false comfort but true companionship to anyone who has loved deeply and lost profoundly.