Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Draw Near to Me

Rate this book
In this highly-anticipated sequel to Swimming with Ghosts, the discovery of a desperately-hidden secret brings a family to the brink of collapse—the exact place where they may ultimately find true healing and forgiveness.

One day before a freak accident lands devoted wife and mother Kristy Weinstein in a coma, her husband, David, discovers a devastating secret she’d been keeping for months. While Kristy’s life hangs in the balance, broken-hearted David, a high-risk OB with a God complex, must grapple with his pride and demons in order to make impossible decisions about his career, wife, and the new baby that has served as a joyful family distraction from the roiling tensions of Kristy’s betrayal. Their college-aged daughter Mia, nicknamed “Scoop,” clashes with her family as she tries to solve the mystery of the events leading up to her mother’s coma, and Patrick, Kristy’s half-brother, fights to hold on to his sobriety and his beloved fiancée while he nearly crumbles under the fear of losing his sister and the responsibility of showing up for Kristy’s family.

With Kristy increasingly unavailable to them, each family member is pushed to find kinship in surprising places and to heal old wounds by drawing near those who have damaged them the most. This is a timely story about the emotional and spiritual work it takes to repair an impossible rupture in a marriage, a relationship, a family, and in turn the larger communities in which we live, hope, and love.

320 pages, Paperback

Published July 7, 2026

Loading...
Loading...

About the author

Michelle Brafman

8 books77 followers
Writing is not my first gig. I’ve also worked as a coffee barista, radio advertising salesperson, and filmmaker, among other jobs. My resume reads like a ransom note, yet this assortment of life experiences has propelled me toward my big passion, the coaxing and telling of stories.

As a filmmaker, the stories that surfaced after the cameras stopped rolling drove me to write some bad short fiction. I kept writing, though, and eventually earned an MA in fiction writing from Johns Hopkins University. My short fiction has since won some nice awards, including a special mention in the Pushcart Prize Anthology, and my essays and stories have appeared in Slate, the Washington Post, the Los Angeles Review of Books, Tablet, Lilith Magazine, the minnesota review, and numerous other publications. I am currently at work on my third book of fiction, a novel titled Status Change.

In addition to my own writing, I help others find and tune their narrative voices. I teach creative writing at The Johns Hopkins MA in Writing Program, the George Washington University, The Washington Center for Psychoanalysis’ New Directions Program, and smaller workshops throughout the Washington, DC area. In 2003, I founded Yeah Write, a writing coaching business.

A Milwaukee,Wisconsin native and University of California, San Diego alum, I still dream about Kopp’s custard and La Jolla Cove swims. I now live just north of the Washington, DC border, in Glen Echo, Maryland, with my husband and two children.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
3 (60%)
4 stars
1 (20%)
3 stars
0 (0%)
2 stars
0 (0%)
1 star
1 (20%)
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Shaf.
113 reviews7 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
June 5, 2026
A family uncertain about the status of their loved one; in pre-stages of mourning and rediscovering the 'how' in loving flawed family members. Indeed what pulls us together internally despite our shortcomings, is love and for many of us this comes primarily from strong family connections and support.

This is what the book attempts to explore in this novel. I picked this up for the promising premise and was interested in delving deep into character work as hinted in the book description.

I tried to finish this book but I just cannot bring myself to. There is a lot of exposition that happens and alot of descriptions of characters doing things. There is very little happening between the descriptions of their every move. Sometimes characters that don't really matter to overall story gets introduced and mentioned like they are integral (like the guy on the plane, archie) but is just a tool to move the story along and for whoever is in focus to throw backstory at. The emotions of each character, their personalities, their motivations feels lost in all the painstaking descriptions of the smallest movements and decisions.

What worked well: the setting and the family dynamics. but again, these were overexplained.

I may not be the target demographic for this, so take my review with a grain of salt.
Profile Image for Sarah.
154 reviews5 followers
Review of advance copy
June 14, 2026
Another Michelle Brafman novel! What a gift! The format of short chapters each shifting focus to a different character made it highly readable. As a follow up to Swimming with Ghosts, I was initially concerned that I didn’t remember enough details of the previous novel, but the relevant facts are revealed to make it a stand-alone for those who have or have not read the previous book. The book is an intimate portrait of complex family dynamics and various addictions that are each the result of childhood traumas. The titles of each section reveal the themes of rupture, repair, and redemption. The angelic character of Rabbi Michael is there to guide everyone along the way, but there are other more fallible humans – sponsors, friends, family members, even a stranger on a plane – who model how to show up for others. I loved that so much of it was set in Rehoboth – one of my favorite places in the world. I could taste the Nicola’s pizza.
Profile Image for Paula Whyman.
Author 3 books42 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
March 5, 2026
I was eager for the chance to encounter these characters I'd grown attached to in Brafman's propulsive novel, SWIMMING WITH GHOSTS. In DRAW NEAR TO ME, the chickens come home to roost, so to speak, as ramifications of events that occurred in the first book radiate out and raise new and compelling conflicts that touch every member of this family. In the process, the novel explores questions about family ties, their intricacy, and whether those ties that unravel can still be repaired. DRAW NEAR TO ME is a humane and hopeful story about the durability of love amid generational secrets, guilt, betrayal, and doubt; a warm-hearted, engrossing portrait of a troubled family struggling to navigate the mess that is life.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews