Monday, May 4, 2026

Joining Janeane on Wednesday - Danielle Crittenden talks about her forthcoming book, Dispatches from Grief: A Mother's Journey Through the Unthinkable



“A little masterpiece.”

—Tina Brown

DISPATCHES FROM GRIEF

A MOTHER’S JOURNEY THROUGH THE UNTHINKABLE

By Danielle Crittenden




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


With grace and clarity, Danielle Crittenden explains how it is possible to go on living in an altered world…Readers will find consolation, hope, and insight, as well as sadness and sorrow.

—Anne Applebaum, Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Gulag, Twilight of Democracy, and Autocracy, Inc.


A profound and powerful look into the human condition.

—David Brooks, New York Times columnist and bestselling author of The Second Mountain



A moving and intimate expression of pain—Kirkus

See accompanying companion piece in The Atlantic: https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2024/05/david-frum-miranda-daughter-grief/677815/

Written with the narrative power that has made Danielle Crittenden one of our most incisive observers of family and culture, Dispatches from Grief: A Mother’s Journey Through the Unthinkable (May 4, 2026, Infinite Books) stands as both a singular portrait of loss and a universal exploration of love’s aftermath. It will speak to anyone who has loved deeply, lost profoundly, and wondered how to continue when continuation seems impossible.

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 this luminous memoir, Dispatches from Grief, Crittenden maps the territory of profound loss with the clarity of a foreign correspondent filing reports from a country no parent ever wishes to visit.

With unflinching honesty and unexpected grace, she chronicles not just the shattering impact of a child's death, but the strange afterlife of grief itself—the way it infiltrates grocery stores and social media, transforms old friendships and forges new ones, and ultimately reshapes the mourner as fundamentally as it has reshaped the world.

Here is grief in all its terrible specificity: the police call that changes everything, the surreal task of choosing a burial dress, the well-meaning friends who offer advice about “stages” that don't exist. But here too is love in its most distilled form—a mother’s meditation on a daughter who commanded dinner tables at twelve, who once interviewed Dick Cheney with a child’s notebook, who transformed from a precocious girl into a sparkling young woman living her dreams in New York.

Crittenden brings a journalist’s eye to the landscape of loss, coining the perfect term for those who try to explain grief to the grieving (“griefsplaining”), finding dark comedy in a hotel clerk's relentless cheerfulness, and discovering that C.S. Lewis told more truth about mourning in seventy-three pages than a library of self-help books. She writes of joining what she calls “the alternative universe”—parents who have lost children—and of the terrible wisdom its members share.

For those walking through their own valleys of grief, this book offers not false comfort but true companionship. For those who love someone who is grieving, it provides a window into a world that can only be understood from within. And for all readers, it serves as a reminder that our time with those we love is both more precious and more precarious than we dare imagine.




# # # # # #
ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Danielle Crittenden is a journalist, author, and former host of the podcast The Femsplainers, known for her incisive and original commentary on women, family, and modern life. In addition to writing a popular monthly newsletter on Substack, her work has appeared in The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Atlantic, and more. She is the author of four previous books, including What Our Mothers Didn’t Tell Us: Why Happiness Eludes the Modern Woman, praised by Vanity Fair as the work of “one of the most important new thinkers about women and family.” Born in Toronto, she now lives in Washington, D.C. and Wellington, Ontario with her husband, journalist David Frum.

Coming up Wednesday May 6th - Ruth Frankling shares details about her new book, The Many Lives of Anne Frank

A revealing biography of Anne Frank, exploring both her life and the impact of her extraordinary diary. Finalist, 2025 Los Angeles Times Boo...