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Death and the Gardener

Profoundly moving ... Excellent ... We are given vivid glimpses into the author’s childhood in communist Bulgaria.
Permit this reader a moment of extreme autofiction fatigue: a longing for clearer genre guardrails. A little border edging ... Its 200-odd pages have a stop-and-start quality. But then haltedness is one of grief’s major hallmarks ... Is itself modest and shrugging — a tender shoot poking up through the gaudy foliage of fall publishing. It’s a consolation rather than a provocation, and occasionally darkly funny.
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Reads with the intimacy of a memoir ... Short chapters trail off and are followed by an epilogue, but eventually, the narrator has no choice but to end the book, which has been a kind of memorial to the fathers who die on our watch.
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