Writing a novel about illness and family is a tricky act. Books fitting this description range from heartfelt drama to saccharine weep fest. But thinking about facing a terminal disease, it’s grace that we’d most like to find at the…
By Lauren LeBlanc Special to the Post-Dispatch, St. Louis Post-Dispatch: Entertainment
Sat, 03/25/2017 - 9:00am
Writing a novel about illness and family is a tricky act. Books fitting this description range from heartfelt drama to saccharine weep fest. But thinking about facing a terminal disease, it’s grace that we’d most like to find at the…