A later-in-life uplit epistolary novel on marriage & widowhood—for fans of Theo of Golden & Mitford.
Two hours and thirty-seven minutes.
That's how long Mike has been gone when Jan Holland picks up the fancy Moleskine notebook her daughter's froofroo therapist insisted would "help her process her grief." As if a stupid notebook could fix the fact that Jan has no idea how to be a widow when she's spent four decades being a wife.
What begins as a skeptical vent becomes a lifeline. Through letters that are by turns prickly, funny, and achingly honest, Jan navigates her messy first year—from medical bills arriving like a tsunami to Mike's heartbreakingly empty chair at the dinner table. All the while, she shoulders a family left behind: a son struggling to stay sober, a daughter who manages grief like a project, and grandchildren who keep asking questions she doesn't know how to answer.
Told entirely through Jan's letters to her husband, Dear Mike is the story of a woman learning—at sixty-five—that being strong enough to ask for help might be the hardest thing she's ever done.
Readers of Jan Karon's Mitford series and Beth Brower's Emma Lion will love this intimate epistolary novel. Perfect for an afternoon read with a cup of tea—or your next book club.