Hi, Honey! A Dementia Diary

Hi, Honey! by Jyl Barlow is a tender and bruisingly honest dementia diary about losing a mother twice: first slowly, through the fog and theft of dementia, and then finally, through death. Written as a series of letters to her mom, Judy, the book follows Barlow through hospice, family upheaval, her mother’s final days, and the strange afterlife of grief, where tiny urns, old gift cards, quilts, Chick-fil-A parking lots, and daily phone calls that can no longer happen become sacred objects. It’s a book about caregiving, but even more than that, it’s about the ache of being someone’s daughter after the person who knew that version of you best is gone.

I liked how unvarnished the book is. Barlow doesn’t try to make grief prettier than it is. She lets it be furious, funny, petty, exhausted, holy, and ridiculous, sometimes all in the same breath. I felt that most sharply in the moments when she’s doing the awful practical work of loss, choosing a “ghost outfit,” dealing with funeral homes and cable companies, dividing ashes into tiny urns, and trying to decide what to keep from a life that can’t possibly fit into boxes. Those scenes have a raw domestic intimacy that made me ache. The book understands that grief doesn’t usually arrive as one grand cinematic collapse. More often, it’s a gift card found in a drawer, a walker no one used, a quilt handed over to the Angus Barn, a phone that no longer rings with “Hi, Honey!”

I also admired the writing, especially its rhythm. Barlow writes with a conversational looseness that can turn suddenly lyrical, and that contrast gives the book much of its force. She can be blunt and profane one moment, then quietly devastating the next. The repeated address to “Mom” becomes the book’s heartbeat, a way of preserving the relationship even as the relationship changes shape. I did occasionally feel the repetition of grief’s spirals, the waiting, the guilt, the anger, the exhaustion, because the book doesn’t smooth those loops into a tidy arc. But I think that’s also part of its truth. Dementia doesn’t give families clean structure. Grief doesn’t either. The book’s messiness feels earned, not careless.

Hi, Honey! had given me something more complicated than comfort. It gave me recognition. Its central idea, that love keeps finding forms after the body and even the mind have failed, is carried with real tenderness, especially in the way Barlow keeps discovering her mother in small rituals, jokes, errands, and acts of care. This is a deeply personal book, but it will speak most clearly to readers who have cared for a declining parent, lost a mother, lived through dementia, or felt bewildered by the ordinary chores that follow death. I’d recommend it to anyone who wants a grief memoir that’s candid, funny in the cracks, and emotionally brave enough to admit that saying goodbye is never just one goodbye.

Pages: 184 | ASIN: B0GWRPZ8X6

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The Literary Titan is an organization of professional editors, writers, and professors that have a passion for the written word. We review fiction and non-fiction books in many different genres, as well as conduct author interviews, and recognize talented authors with our Literary Book Award. We are privileged to work with so many creative authors around the globe.

Posted on June 28, 2026, in Book Reviews and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.

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