Book Review: Everything Lost Returns by Sarah DometSarah Domet's Everything Lost Returns (Flatiron Books, February 17, 2026) is a poignant and intricately woven dual-timeline novel that feels both intimate and expansive, like two comets streaking across different eras but sharing the same luminous tail. Following her acclaimed debut The Guineveres, Domet returns with a story that blends historical fiction, quiet supernatural undertones, and sharp explorations of women's desires, regrets, and resilience.The novel centers on two women separated by nearly eight decades yet bound by the rare passage of Halley's Comet and a Cincinnati soap factory called Earthshine. In 1910, Opal Doucet flees an abusive marriage in rural Ohio and finds precarious refuge as an "Earthshine Girl"—a factory worker peddling the company's miracle soap while drawing on folk medicine and spiritualist influences. Seventy-five years later, in 1986, actress Nona Dixon confronts a personal and professional crossroads, drawn into the lingering shadow of a long-ago tragedy at the same factory that has quietly underwritten parts of her life.Domet handles the parallel narratives with confidence, letting the timelines echo and inform each other without forcing neat resolutions. The comet serves as more than a gimmick; it becomes a symbol of fleeting brilliance, recurrence, and the way certain losses orbit back into our lives when we're least prepared. Themes of guilt, redemption, friendship, betrayal, and the quiet power women wield to alter their own trajectories (and sometimes others') ripple through both stories.The prose is gorgeous—lyrical without tipping into excess—and Domet excels at capturing the tactile details of each period: the chemical scents and grime of the factory floor in the early 20th century, the cultural and personal unease of the mid-1980s. Characters feel fully inhabited, flawed, and complex. Opal's resourcefulness and guarded hope are particularly compelling, while Nona's mid-life reckoning carries a raw, recognizable ache. The supporting cast—factory women, spiritualists, ambitious men, and complicated friends—adds texture without overwhelming the central relationships.If there's a minor critique, it's that some threads (particularly the spiritualism and certain revelations) occasionally feel a touch underdeveloped or hazy, leaving the reader wanting just a bit more clarity amid the atmospheric haze. Yet this same dreamlike quality is part of the book's charm; it mirrors the elusive nature of memory and cosmic events.Ultimately, Everything Lost Returns is a tenderhearted, tension-filled read that surprises in its scope and emotional precision. It's a story about how the past doesn't stay buried, how women's lives can be linked across time by shared struggles and daring choices, and how even small acts of courage or connection can change the course of history in subtle, lasting ways. For fans of historical fiction with heart, character-driven drama, or novels that weave the ordinary with the faintly otherworldly, this is a celestial event worth marking on your reading calendar.Rating: 4.5/5
A beautifully crafted novel that lingers like the afterimage of a comet—bright, haunting, and impossible to forget.