
The Widow's Crayon Box
Poems
23 June 2026
Territory Rights — Worldwide including Canada, Singapore and Malaysia, but excluding the British Commonwealth.
Description
A book-length sequence of poems that dares to affirm the vast variety of emotional colours in loss and rejuvenation
After her husband’s death, Molly Peacock realised she was not living the received idea of a widow’s mauve existence but instead was experiencing life in all colours. These gorgeous poems–joyful, furious, mournful, bewildered, sexy, devastated, whimsical and above all, moving–composed in sonnet sequences and in open forms, designed in four movements (After, Before, When and Afterglow)–illuminate both the role of the caregiver and the crystalline emotions one can experience after the death of a cherished partner. With her characteristic virtuosity, her fearless willingness to confront even the most difficult emotions, and always with buoyancy and zest, Peacock charts widowhood in the twenty-first century.
From “Touched:”
After you died, I felt you next to me,
and over months you entered gradually
into that lake and disappeared. Not gone,
but so internalised you’re not next to me.
Reviews
"Bittersweet pleasures. . . . [W]hatever comes to mind, . . . pull up a chair, ‘listen, question, watch things heal.’" — Nuar Alsadir, O, the Oprah Magazine
"Peacock roars to life . . . with formal verse that explained human pain and loss in monumental terms. . . . [She] straddles the Canadian-American divide and . . . serves as poetic inspiration . . . for poets of both nations." — Shane Neilson, Poetry Foundation








