11/14/2022
A couple navigate their young son’s terminal illness in Louis’s painful but spirited graphic memoir debut. Before marrying, the idea of parenthood daunted Louis, who wonders, “What if I couldn’t protect my kid from all the dangerous, scary, sad things?” But when Louis and wife Emily bring home Ronan, Louis couldn’t be more delighted. Ronan’s “a pretty happy baby,” but his parents notice he isn’t hitting typical developmental milestones. Surpassing their worst fears, an ophthalmologist identifies signs of Tay-Sachs disease, a genetic disorder that affects nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord, and is normally fatal by age four. Tracking Ronin’s prognosis, each page is freighted with unbearable foreboding. Louis darts forward and backward in time, pursuing echoes and themes as he tries to make sense of a senseless grief. His principal subject, though, is the joy he felt being Ronan’s dad. Frivolous comic asides—dad jokes—dispense levity throughout, and Antal’s art balances the lighter tone, sometimes to disarming effect, as when Louis pushes past a retail aisle of childproofing gear, realizing he won’t need any. In this frank telling of a devastating ordeal, it’s the beauty of the too-brief loving moments that lingers. (Nov.)
Ronan and The Endless Sea of Stars , like the best nonfiction, is honest and observant. Only someone who had lived this story could have written it, and only a writer as brave as Rick Louis would have been as truthful, with a sharp eye for tiny, telling details. Louis and artist Lara Antal understand that graphic novels have the unique ability to show the negative space left by things that are no longer there, holes that can never be filled. It’s a heartbreakingly beautiful book.
author of Mom’s Cancer and A Fire Story Brian Fies
For anyone who’s been tasked with loving someone who is leaving—a book about being as present as you can for them.
author of Rosalie Lightning Tom Hart
Even for the hypervigilant parent-to-be, author Rick Louis reminds us that there are situations you just can’t prepare for. Lara Antal’s art guides the reader into the soaring, starry sky of dreams and profound darkness of nightmares, in this story of the huge love and unimaginable heartbreak of losing a child.
author of Marbles Ellen Forney
A moving meditation on death and grieving. This book illustrates the resilience of the human spirit through beautiful visual metaphors and subtle humor.
author of Almost American Girl Robin Ha
I found it a deeply affecting work. An honest and unsentimental account of a family’s tragedy. The book charts Rick Louis’s struggle to find the tiniest amounts of solace in this devastating event, and his ultimate belief that every second he spent with his son was life-affirming. He finds light in the darkest of places, and that is a message we can all learn from.
author of Putin’s Russia: The Rise of a Darryl Cunningham
“ Ronan and the Endless Sea of Stars is a powerful, touching, honest portrayal . . . [the] mix of humor and sadness makes Ronan all the more poignant . . . Please read Ronan for its very human story presented with sensitivity, caring, lightness, and powerful imagery.”
"A spare account of a short life that will leave readers feeling both uplifted and emotionally drained."—Kirkus Reviews STARRED Review “[A] painful but spirited graphic memoir debut . . . Antal’s art balances the lighter tone, sometimes to disarming effect . . . In this frank telling of a devastating ordeal, it’s the beauty of the too-brief loving moments that lingers.”—Publishers Weekly “I found it a deeply affecting work. An honest and unsentimental account of a family’s tragedy. The book charts Rick Louis’s struggle to find the tiniest amounts of solace in this devastating event, and his ultimate belief that every second he spent with his son was life-affirming. He finds light in the darkest of places, and that is a message we can all learn from.”—Darryl Cunningham, author of Putin’s Russia: The Rise of a Dictator “Ronan and The Endless Sea of Stars , like the best nonfiction, is honest and observant. Only someone who had lived this story could have written it, and only a writer as brave as Rick Louis would have been as truthful, with a sharp eye for tiny, telling details. Louis and artist Lara Antal understand that graphic novels have the unique ability to show the negative space left by things that are no longer there, holes that can never be filled. It’s a heartbreakingly beautiful book.”—Brian Fies, author of Mom’s Cancer and A Fire Story “Even for the hypervigilant parent-to-be, author Rick Louis reminds us that there are situations you just can’t prepare for. Lara Antal’s art guides the reader into the soaring, starry sky of dreams and profound darkness of nightmares, in this story of the huge love and unimaginable heartbreak of losing a child.”—Ellen Forney, author of Marbles “A moving meditation on death and grieving. This book illustrates the resilience of the human spirit through beautiful visual metaphors and subtle humor.”—Robin Ha, author of Almost American Girl “For anyone who’s been tasked with loving someone who is leaving—a book about being as present as you can for them.”—Tom Hart, author of Rosalie Lightning “ Ronan and the Endless Sea of Stars is a powerful, touching, honest portrayal . . . [the] mix of humor and sadness makes Ronan all the more poignant . . . Please read Ronan for its very human story presented with sensitivity, caring, lightness, and powerful imagery.”—Graphic Medicine
★ 12/02/2023
A loving couple's child arrives a few years into the marriage, welcomed enthusiastically. But the cheery youngster misses infant milestones, stops developing, and at nine months is diagnosed with Tay-Sachs disease. This genetic disorder deprives a new life of a critical enzyme that affects brain and nerve cells; Ronan will die before age three. In a double tragedy, fanciful writer Louis and his teacher wife Emily give themselves entirely up to the terminally ill Ronan, with toys, bedtime stories, and doctoring, but lose each other as well in the process and separate after their son's funeral. Louis relates how an "adrift in a sea of stars" fantasy soothed his own childhood, and Antal fills the story with sometimes puckish visual imagery in blue and black hues: a caricatured Heimlich maneuver-style poster to revive dying babies, an imagined toy train carrying off a laughing Ronan instead of a hearse, an inky figure for this "little-boy-shaped hole in the universe" that in Rick's fantasy is refused admission to school. VERDICT Ronan's lyrical, tragic story tells how death ends a life, not a relationship, and how forlorn lovers can savor their joy about those they love even while mourning their loss. Highly recommended.
★ 2022-08-31 A heart-wrenching graphic memoir about losing a child to a rare neurological disorder.
“This is not a story about grief,” writes Louis about his son’s battle with Tay-Sachs, an incurable disease. “It is just the story of a little boy who was only here for a short while. And what he was like. And what he meant to us.” There’s a fairy-tale sense of wonder to such narration, a balance of light and dark that matches the stars-and-space backdrop of Antal’s illustrations. With tonal command and a penchant for understatement, the author doesn’t pull any emotional punches, but neither does he wallow in tragedy. The artistry underscores the tone of the text, with whimsy and flights of fancy, whether soaring toward the stars or plunging into a dark night of the soul. “I knew there was something I needed to understand, and perhaps share, about my brief, intense, joyful, devastating parenting experience,” writes the author at the beginning. He chronicles his journey from initial indifference about parenting to the emotional richness and bonding of early parenthood to the terrible news that Ronan would not have long to live, a fact that ravaged his parents and their marriage. Yet there is joy and even redemption within the elliptical sparseness of the narration, and Antal’s illustrations reinforce the impact of the words and fill in some of the gaps. This is not a book narrowly focused on a readership of other parents facing such a rare disorder. Rather, Louis and Antal combine to create an impressive work that explores universal themes of mortality, parental love, selflessness, and resilience. “Being Ronan’s father was the greatest thing that ever happened to me,” writes the author. Readers will believe him wholeheartedly.
A spare account of a short life that will leave readers feeling both uplifted and emotionally drained.