Love Letters to the Dead
Publisher,Hot Key Books
Publication Date,
Format, Paperback
Weight, 240 g
No. of Pages, 323
It begins as an assignment for English class: write a letter to a dead person - any dead person. Laurel chooses Kurt Cobain - he died young, and so did Laurel's sister May - so maybe he'll understand a bit of what Laurel is going through. Soon Laurel is writing letters to lots of dead people - Janis Joplin, Heath Ledger, River Phoenix, Amelia Earhart ...it's like she can't stop.
And she'd certainly never dream of handing them in to her teacher. She writes about what it's like going to a new high school, meeting new friends, falling in love for the first time - and how her family has shattered since May died. But much as Laurel might find writing the letters cathartic, she can't keep real life out forever. The ghosts of her past won't be contained between the lines of a page, and she will have to come to terms with growing up, the agony of losing a beloved sister, and the realisation that only you can shape your destiny.
This book is totally amazing and alive. I lost my father few months ago and I wished I could write love letters to him as well. I was crying reading this book and could relate so much with my current situation. I played the music mentioned in this book while reading it, it felt like I was with Laurel all the time.
This book was absolutely amazing! The characters are so dynamic and I love how the book is written completely in letters and we get to see every part of Laurel’s life.
This book really was touching. I don’t know what it’s like to lose someone but the grief in this book is so profound that I know that I don’t want to know. This book really is powerful and I am definitely going to be on the look-out for other works by the author.
This is a profoundly moving meditation on grief, written with rare sensitivity and the kind of prose that nearly stops your heart with moments of quiet, anguished beauty.