Amy Starr Review
In an era of “brand-building” and constant content, Amy Starr is either incredibly brave or completely mad. After reading her novel, I suspect it’s the former. The Last Goodbye isn’t about spies, serial killers, or dystopian futures. It’s about a woman named Clara returning to her small Michigan hometown to close out her late grandmother’s estate. On the surface, it sounds quiet. And it is—but in the way a held breath is quiet.
And honestly? It’s the loudest thing I’ve read all year. Have you read anything by Amy Starr? Or found a quiet author who surprised you? Drop a comment below. amy starr
Some say “Amy Starr” is a pseudonym. Others whisper it’s a retired professor finally publishing her life’s work. One forum user swears they saw a woman matching her description at a used bookstore in Portland, just sitting in the corner, reading, not telling anyone who she was. In an era of “brand-building” and constant content,
Starr writes sentences like she’s confessing secrets. There’s a chapter where Clara finds a stack of unsent love letters from 1972, and I had to put the book down three times because I was crying into my coffee. It’s about a woman named Clara returning to
For me, that book is The Last Goodbye . And the woman behind it is . Who is Amy Starr? If you scour her publisher’s website, the bio is painfully short: Amy lives in the Pacific Northwest with her dog, Frankie. She likes rain, sourdough, and old typewriters.
Every so often, a book arrives on the shelf with zero hype, no movie deal attached, and an author name you don’t recognize—only to burrow into your chest and refuse to leave.