In the aftermath of losing their eldest child, Beada and Porter have become an estranged couple, living on different continents. She's in rural Minnesota raising their two other teens, while Porter visits from Bangkok "when he can," disguising his pain as arrogance. When Beada's only outlet—careful, unorthodox confessions to the local priest—take an abrupt turn, a quiet but seismic shift forces everyone in the family to decide what they cannot live without.
Told in spare, luminous prose, Until You Find Your Way walks you through grief and the many sides of love, showing how much the heart can hold when it learns to let go.
Annie Bruno has published essays and short stories in Lost & Found: Stories from New York, Mr. Beller's Neighborhood, Dog Culture: Writers on the Character of Canines, The Mississippi Review, and Black Heart Magazine. She grew up in Minnesota and lived in Washington, DC, and New York City before settling in Los Angeles with her family. This is her first novel.