The Last Love Note(100)



To my beloved parents, Barrie and Claire, who have a cameo in the book as their amazing selves, since the moment you taught me to read, you’ve supported every step. This story is a tribute to your love as well, and to Dad’s endless and unfathomably patient care of Mum through dementia.

Hannah and Sophie, since you were little you’ve watched me work for this dream. Now you’re adults, I love sharing it with you as it unfolds. The way you responded as teenagers when our world shattered is the most impressive thing I’ve ever witnessed, and your resilience since has been inspiring. Love to Jack and Tom, too.

Sebastian, you handle life without Dad in a way that couldn’t impress me more, with a maturity beyond your years. Our writing dates and mutual creative encouragement are some of the most magical and unexpected delights in my life. Dad was always immeasurably proud of you, and always will be.

Jeff, I needed to create two heroes in an attempt to capture the extent of my love for you, and even then it was impossible. You will always be more than Cam and Hugh combined. You said to ‘be brilliant’. You said to go out into the world and get on with life. You could never have known how hard that would be without you, and how fervently I wish I didn’t have the experience to have written this novel, but I hope, wherever you are, it makes you proud. You are in every word. I will always keep the light on for you. x





BOOK CLUB NOTES




‘What a precious escape this was.’ Kate feels like her ride on the motorbike is a break from her grief. How does meeting Justin shake things up for her?

What is it about death and grief that we find so difficult to talk about?

How do you build your own identity and dreams within a long-term relationship?

If you lost a partner, what do you think would be the hardest part of meeting someone new?

Kate worries that widows are always judged when they fall in love again. What do you think drives this judgement?

What are your thoughts on the question Cam asked Hugh?

Do you think Hugh did the right thing, keeping the secret from Kate? What would you have done?

How might the novel have played out differently if Kate’s loss had been sudden instead of gradual?

What was the saddest moment in the novel for you?

Grace and Hugh looked good ‘on paper’. If it wasn’t for Kate, do you think they could have made it?

They say to ‘write what you know’. Based on that advice, if you were going to write a book, what would it be about?

What dreams have you been deferring that you’d most regret if time ran out?





ABOUT THE AUTHOR




Emma is a novelist, feature writer, photographer, professional speaker and accountability coach. She has been writing fiction since she first fell for Anne of Green Gables at fourteen and is the author of the YA novels Unrequited: Boy band meets girl, Tilly Maguire and the Royal Wedding Mess and non-fiction book I Don’t Have Time (co-authored with Audrey Thomas), as well as the parenting memoir Wits’ End Before Breakfast! Confessions of a Working Mum.

She wrote this book in the wake of her husband’s death. It’s a fictional tribute to their love, an attempt to articulate the magnitude of her loss and a life-affirming commitment to hope.

Emma lives just outside Canberra, where her world centres on her two adult daughters, young son, loved step-children and step-grandchildren, writing, photography and endlessly chasing the aurora australis.

Emma Grey's Books