In a rust-belt Midwestern city where the rain never quite decides to stop and the past refuses to stay buried, forty-year-old Alex is drifting—coding apps that shame people into better habits, smoking through regrets, and letting old friendships fade like factory smoke.
When the golden boy of their teenage crew dies at the same age from the habit they once laughed about, the news cracks Alex open. Suddenly the ghosts of high school summers, attic sleepovers, and shared cigarettes won't stay quiet. He sets out to find the people who once made life feel possible—Lucy, the widow piecing together photographs and promises; Daniel, the ex-cop now busking truths under a leaky bandstand; and the rest of the ragged pack who grew up in a crumbling boarding house that smelled of cinnamon toast and second chances.
What begins as a search for answers about a lost friend becomes something more dangerous: an unflinching look at the life he's half-lived, the people he's half-loved, and the small, stubborn acts of showing up that might still redeem the years he let slip away.
Tender, unflinching, and laced with dark humor, Smoke of Home is a quietly powerful novel about grief that doesn't arrive in a single blow but in slow, damp waves—and about the meaning we make when we finally stop running from the ones who still matter.
In the end, the weight of the world doesn't lift. It just gets carried by more hands.
Perfect for readers who love Fredrik Backman, Matt Haig, and stories that remind us the best rooms are the ones we keep returning to—together.
We publiceren alleen reviews die voldoen aan de voorwaarden voor reviews. Bekijk onze voorwaarden voor reviews.