A relatable, honest, poignant look into motherhood, love, and overcoming. Inspiring and hopeful. Loved it! Zibby Owens, host of Totally Booked with Zibby
Living Proof is a testament to the power of courage, hope, and love. Above all, love. I read this heartbreaking but life-affirming book in one sitting. Thrity Umrigar, bestselling author of The Space Between Us and Honor
Tiffany Graham Charkosky writes a beautiful, compelling narrative about motherhood, death, and griefBut it is the incredible way that she writes about love intertwined with forgiveness that creates a memoir worth returning to again and again. Brandi Larsen, cowriter of Uncultured
In this honest, unflinching memoir, Tiffany Graham Charkosky shares a deeply personal story that is at times wrenching but ultimately empoweringone that shows it is possible to rewrite the future. Laura Maylene Walter, author of Body of Stars
Tiffany Graham Charkosky draws a shimmering narrative line across generations, from the mother she lost to the children she fears leaving. In the minimally charted land of genetic testing, this book acts as a bold, unflinching, and ultimately heartening travelogue. Cheryl E. Klein, author of Crybaby and senior editor at MUTHA Magazine
Vivid and heartrendingTiffany shares the story of facing a diagnosis straight on, ultimately showing us how to be brave, generous, andfinallyforgiving to herself and the body she was born into. This memoir was impossible to put down. Margaret Kimball, author of And Now I Spill the Family Secrets
Charkosky weaves a profoundly moving story of connection, hope, and all the ways legacy unfolds backward and forward through time. While Charkoskys story is sparked by Lynch syndrome, she taps into the deepest truth of lifewe are infinitely connected to everyone who came before us and everyone who will come after. Cait Weiss Orcutt, author of Valleyspeak
Living Proof is a moving and beautifully writtenmasterfully constructedmemoir. It is also a gripping, almost terrifying journey, during which Tiffany Graham Charkosky is forced to travel from the comforting world of a loving family and rewarding career into the mysteries of genetic predestination. David Lynn, editor emeritus of The Kenyon Review