|
|
|||
|
||||
OverviewThere are things you only think to say after it's too late to say them. Questions that arrive fully formed, long after the moment for asking has passed. Sentences that surface in ordinary moments-while driving, folding laundry, standing in line-only to remind you that the person who should hear them is no longer there. Conversations I Wish I'd Had With My Mother is a book about that space. This is not a memoir in the traditional sense, and it isn't a grief guide or a search for closure. It's a sequence of short, numbered reflections-conversations that never happened, but continued anyway. Together, they form an intimate record of how love evolves after loss, how relationships persist even when one voice has gone quiet. Each entry stands on its own. Some are heavy. Some are light. Some are unexpectedly calm. They move between memory, observation, regret, gratitude, humor, and quiet acceptance. There are no imagined replies, no reconstructed scenes, no dramatic revelations. What remains is something more durable: orientation. The way we keep checking ourselves against the people who shaped us, even when they're no longer here to answer. This book doesn't rush toward healing or resolution. It doesn't promise insight on a schedule. Instead, it honors the way grief actually behaves-circling back, softening, deepening, changing shape over time. What begins as ache slowly becomes steadiness. What feels unfinished learns how to rest. Readers who have lost a parent will recognize the familiar terrain immediately: the instinct to reach for the phone, the sudden realization that childhood memories no longer have a source for correction, the strange permanence of unasked questions. But this book is not only for those who have lost a mother. Anyone who has loved deeply-and continues to feel that love after absence-will find themselves reflected here. You don't need to read this book in order. You don't need to read it all at once. Many readers find themselves opening to a single entry, sitting with it, and closing the book again. Others read it slowly, letting the repetition and variation do their quiet work. The form invites return rather than completion. What makes this book different is its restraint. There is no sentimentality, no manufactured closure, no attempt to make loss inspirational. Instead, there is honesty-about regret, about care, about the way love persists without requiring answers in return. The voice is clear, grounded, and deeply human. At its heart, this book is about continuity. About how relationships don't end when someone dies-they change medium. About how love doesn't disappear-it learns how to speak differently. About how conversation can continue, even in silence. If you've ever thought I wish I could ask them one more thing, this book already understands you. And if you've ever discovered that speaking to someone you've lost feels less like holding on-and more like learning how to live forward with them still present-then these pages may feel like a place you didn't know you were looking for, but recognize immediately when you arrive. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Stan HockeyPublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.70cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.172kg ISBN: 9798244466348Pages: 122 Publication Date: 18 January 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
||||