Harris was such an amazing talent - this was a hard but authentic read.
Harris was such an amazing talent - this was a hard but authentic read.
Mr. Coleman has done a remarkable job with this series. I‘m so glad that he‘s keeping it alive and well this latest Stone mystery didn‘t disappoint but then again it never has. It keeps me waiting until next years addition!
I wasn‘t going to sleep last night until I finished this. I struggled through the last like 10 pages, but I did it! 😂. This a fun, easy to read series. I‘m reading them totally out of order but it doesn‘t really matter! Jesse Stone reminds me of Stone Barrington.. ! 🤗
This book was so full of heart and insight. I could feel the author‘s emotion through her writing and I found this to be such an honest account of loss and grief. Funny and heartbreaking all the same and very important. Loved this!
With so many available words to depict the gravity of a thought, constant overuse of the f-bomb instead is maddening.
This could have been a very important book on grief. I‘ve been there, thought those thoughts, and said the same things while processing the pain. I get that, and it‘s comforting to know it‘s normal. But the crude writing was so distracting, the tragedy of the story behind the grief got lost somewhere.
I can‘t decide if I want to read this book. From what I‘ve read, I don‘t think Harris is particularly funny, I didn‘t like the shows he wrote for, and I‘m not really into comedy.
BUT I think his death from an opiate overdose is tragic, and I‘m having a hard time turning away from his sister‘s pain.
Help? Advice?
Catherine Ricketts‘ stunning and beautiful essay on The Millions is worth reading and pondering. https://themillions.com/2018/10/what-i-saw-when-i-really-looked-my-late-brother-... (Had me reflecting back on Stephanie Wittels‘ journey in her powerful memoir about losing her brother, comedian and actor Harris Wittels.)