The Loneliest Places: Loss, Grief, and the Long Journey Home

by Rachel Dickinson

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Book cover for The Loneliest Places

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"A child's suicide pitches you into a hellish place of fragmentary images, the deepest depression imaginable, efforts to destroy yourself, and an almost complete break with what's happening in the world around you. That was my experience. I wish it upon no one."

The essays of The Loneliest Places began as a chronicle of Rachel Dickinson's life after her son's suicide. The pieces became much more. Dickinson writes the unimaginable and terrifying facts of heartbreaking loss. In The Loneliest Places she tells stories from her months on the run, fleeing her grief and herself, as she escapes to Iceland and the Falkland Islands—as far as possible from the memories of her dead son, Jack. She frankly relates the paralyzing emotion that sometimes left her trapped in her home, confined to a single chair, helplessly isolated.

The tales from these years are bleak and Dickinson's journey home, back to her changed self and fractured family, is lonely. Conjuring Emily Dickinson, however, she describes how hope was sighted, allowed to perch, and then, remarkably, made actual.

  • ISBN10 1501766090
  • ISBN13 9781501766091
  • Publish Date 15 October 2022
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country US
  • Imprint Three Hills
  • Format Paperback (US Trade)
  • Pages 248
  • Language English