“Extraordinary, exceptionally well written, informative, emotionally and intellectually engaging, and an inherently fascinating read from start to finish.”
—Midwest Book Review
“A riveting exploration of memory through images, Bass takes the reader on a poignant journey of love and excruciating loss. Lightkeeper so adeptly captures the gray area of recollection: the 'proof' of photographs versus the accuracy of our own memory. A beautiful, inspiring read! We live in a time where images are ubiquitous, and almost everyone is a photographer, documenting the world around her with a phone or a camera. When we stop long enough to look back at the images we have collected over time, it can help redefine one’s relationship with one’s past. Bass movingly reminds us to keep looking!”
—Lynsey Addario, Photojournalist and New York Times bestselling author of It’s What I Do: a Photographer’s Life of Love and War
“Turning her attentive photographer’s eye toward the larger-than-life father who raised her, and the accident that tragically tore him from her life, Stacy Waldman Bass achieves a dazzling act of alchemy, excavating joy from grief and shining light into darkness. Lightkeeper is a gleaming tribute to the ways love shapes us, and a gorgeous testament of the power of memory to breathe life into those we have lost.”
—Nicole Graev Lipson, USA Today bestselling author of Mothers and Other Fictional Characters
“The undeniable dualities of memory, love, and loss abound in this elegant, touching memoir.”
—Steve Leder, New York Times bestselling author of The Beauty of What Remains and For You When I am Gone
“Stacy Waldman Bass writes like an angel, and, like her photographs, her words go beyond merely capturing a moment. With courage, wonder, and immense love, she ventures beyond the frame to the shimmering, outwardly rippling emotional legacy of every memory, every person she turns the fine lens of her attention toward. Like any brilliant archivist, she wants nothing to be lost, from the deepest griefs to the tiniest, most fleeting childhood joys. She has kept it all. And how lucky, how blessed we are that she has given it to us.”
—Marisa de los Santos, New York Times bestselling author of Belong to Me and I’ll Be Your Blue Sky