Ring follows Lee’s transformative quest to let go of their pain, reconnect with the world around them, and face the staggering emotional depth of their all-consuming grief. Lerner sketches that journey in muted shades of melancholy, sharp despair, and subtle glimmers of hope, as Lee builds relationships with other sanctuary patrons while piloting their own healing. The result is a heartbreaking narrative from a broken mother, a powerful story of grief’s debilitating effect, that foreshadows Lee’s struggle between ending their own life or rediscovering a new purpose. Lerner tenderly crafts a visceral, emotive bond between parent and child, carefully depicting how the severance of that bond ripples in its aftereffects.
Where Lerner’s debut shines the brightest is in its portrayal of grief as an individual journey, unique to its bearer, and, in Lee’s case, a marriage of philosophical and spiritual beliefs that transform their view on what it means to be alive. Hope takes the form of a sanctuary patron’s dog, Ring, who represents both the enduring attachment Lee feels with Rachel and Lee’s connection to the life still ahead of them. What starts out as a last trip to end it all blooms into an awakening for new beginnings, an awareness of the power behind gratitude, forgiveness, and serving others.
Takeaway: Grieving parent embarks on a transformative journey of healing and renewal.
Comparable Titles: Mark Gunther's Without Jenny, Catherine Ryan Hyde’s Take Me With You.
Production grades
Cover: B
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A-