During a pandemic lockdown full of pyjama dance parties, life talks, and final goodbyes, a family helps a father die with dignity.
In April 2020, journalist Mitchell Consky received bad news: his father was diagnosed with a rare and terminal cancer, with less than two months to live. Suddenly, he and his extended family — many of them healthcare workers — were tasked with reconciling the social distancing required by the Covid-19 pandemic with a family-based approach to end-of-life care. The result was a home hospice during the first lockdown. Suspended within the chaos of medication and treatments were dance parties, episodes of Tiger King, and his father's many deadpan jokes.
Leaning into his journalistic intuitions, Mitchell interviewed his father daily, making audio recordings of final talks, emotional goodbyes, and the unexpected laughter that filled his father's final days. Serving as a catalyst for fatherly affection, these interviews became an opportunity for emotional confession during the slowed-down time of a shuttered world, and reflect how far a family went in making a dying loved one feel safe at home.
- Handmade and Homegrown
- New eBook additions
- Dungeons & Dragons
- Black History and Black Future
- Canada Reads 2025
- Celebrating #LMM150
- Witch, Please
- True North Strong and Well-Read
- Summer Reading List: Recent Canadian books to read this summer
- Hamilton Reads 2024: Pride Month
- Looks Sweet but Could Be Spicy
- Based on a True Story: Page to Screen Edition
- Always Available Fiction
- See all
- Canada Reads 2025
- True Crime: For When You Run Out of Podcasts
- Available now
- Lest We Forget
- Summer Reading List: Recent Canadian books to read this summer
- New audiobook additions
- Looks Sweet but Could Be Spicy
- Most popular
- Hamilton Reads 2024: Chrysalis
- Indigenous History and Voices
- Based on a True Story: Page to Screen Edition
- Entering Our Eclipse Era
- BookTok Made Us Do It
- See all