The Reading Bud

Book Blog by Heena Rathore-Pardeshi

ARC Review: Stolen: Love and Loss in the Time of COVID-19 by Elizabeth Jaeger

Book Details:

Author: Elizabeth Jaeger
Release Date:
September 16, 2025
Series:
Genre: Memoir, Non-Fiction
Format: E-book 
Pages: 282 pages
Publisher: Unsolicited Press
Blurb:
When the world first went into lockdown, on a lark, Jaeger started a blog. Then, on Day 12, the unimaginable happened. Her dad got sick and she rushed him to the hospital. What followed was a close look at what it was like to watch a loved one suffer from COVID. After a nineteen day battle, her father died and the family was stricken with grief. But grieving during the pandemic was drastically different than in a time of normalcy. There were no funerals. No religious services. No ability to mingle with friends. Just the heavy feeling of loss, which at times was suffocating. Stolen: Love and Loss in the Time of COVID-19 captures life in New York City – the constant sound of sirens, the new graves dug daily, the eerie silence and desolation of local playgrounds – the epicenter of the virus. In flashbacks throughout the narrative, vignettes illustrate her dad in happier times-a doting father, an adoring grandfather, a man who always put family first. It depicts encountering COVID up close and places it in a political and personal context. While the story is about one family, it is not unique. COVID touched everyone’s lives and many endured a similar experience.

Review

Rating: 5 out of 5.

Stolen: Love and Loss in the Time of COVID-19 by Elizabeth Jaeger is an exceptionally intimate, unflinching memoirs I’ve read in recent years. In a world oversaturated with distant, clinical accounts of the pandemic, Elizabeth Jaeger offers something heartbreakingly rare: a deeply personal narrative of loss that is both sharply detailed and universally resonant.

The book talks about the author’s father who fell gravely ill during COVID-19 lockdowns. What follows is a searing account of not just a man’s rapid decline due to COVID, but the implosion of a family’s entire emotional infrastructure in a time when even mourning was regulated and restricted. What struck me most is the clarity and honesty in author Jaeger’s voice. There is no melodrama here, just truth—raw, painful, and exquisitely observed. The way she balances the clinical with the poetic, the fear with the memory, the personal with the political, is nothing short of masterful. She weaves in flashbacks that breathe life into her father’s character—a man full of love, idiosyncrasies, and integrity—making the eventual loss even more gutting.

The depiction of New York City as both a ghost town and a siren-laced epicenter adds a haunting backdrop to her narrative. I found myself stopping multiple times, just to sit with the weight of it. And yet, this is not just a story about death—it’s about love. Fierce, unwavering love. It’s about remembering someone wholly and refusing to let their narrative be reduced to statistics.

Author Elizabeth Jaeger has not only chronicled her experience; she’s captured the grief of a generation. Stolen is a time capsule, a testimony, and a reminder that behind every “case” or “death toll” is a family forever changed.


You can also read this review at:

Goodreads



I love reading your comments, so please go ahead…

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

I’m Heena

Welcome to The Reading Bud, my cosy corner of the internet dedicated to all things books and authors. Here, I invite you to join me on a journey of discovering under-represented books, independent and small press authors, and all things book with a touch of love and loud purrs. Let’s get Reading!

May 2025
M T W T F S S
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031  

Reading is like breathing to me.

Recent Posts

  • Book Review: The Forgotten Girls (Louise Rick #7)

    n a forest in Denmark, a ranger discovers the fresh corpse of an unidentified woman. A large scar on one side of her face should make the identification easy, but nobody has reported her missing. After…

  • Book Review: Googolplex

    If you could have anything but the one thing you really wanted, what would you do? Jack is part of a group of colonists traveling to the distant planet Shylock to build themselves a new home.…

  • Book Review: Southern Solstice

    As rich and distinctive as the Lowcountry itself, Southern Solstice presents a clever and charismatic journey of love, heartache, adaptation and emotional fortitude as told through a patina of family heritage. When twenty-four-year-old Larken Devereaux is…

  • Book Review: Smokescreen

    It starts in Washington when a lone gunman enters a busy burger chain and opens fire killing twenty-five people. It continues in Paris, London, Sydney and Beijing. Authorities, including FBI agent Jack Rossi find no motive…

  • Book Review: The Perfect View

    Mara is unaware that she is not the only one with the perfect view of her own life. Someone who has known her since the very beginning is watching her from across the lake and has…