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On Witness and Respair

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The collected creative nonfiction of a singular American writer, Jesmyn Ward, including widely shared classics, three never-before-published speeches, and an introductory essay.

Respair (noun, obsolete), fresh hope after despair.

From the two-time National Book Award winner and New York Times bestselling author Jesmyn Ward, this collection of essays documents more than a decade of work in the life of a singular writer often lauded as “the heir apparent to Toni Morrison” (LitHub). Beginning with her upbringing in a multigenerational household in rural Mississippi, the cradle of both her youth and her gift for storytelling, Ward brings her keen wisdom and hauntingly lyrical prose to a range of topics, following in her grandmother Dorothy’s footsteps when she promises always to “Tell it straight. Tell it all.”

True to her word, in these pages Ward contemplates the writers and novels of her youth and adulthood—the transformative power of discovering Octavia Butler as a twenty-something, the mirror that Richard Wright’s novels held up to her own childhood, and of course, her lifelong love for Toni Morrison. Ward ruminates on her approach to both fiction and life, reflecting on the power of the novel, how to raise a Black son in an era of rising divisiveness and cruelty, as well as her own personal tragedies—including the titular essay of the collection, which tells the story of her partner’s sudden death on the eve of the COVID-19 epidemic. Every bit as piercing and moving as her fiction, On Witness and Respair is a testament to Ward’s powers as “one of America’s finest living writers” (San Francisco Chronicle) and is a monument to hope, beauty, and personal and collective resilience.

7 pages, Audible Audio

Expected publication May 19, 2026

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About the author

Jesmyn Ward

25 books9,682 followers
Jesmyn Ward is the author of Where the Line Bleeds, Salvage the Bones, and Men We Reaped. She is a former Stegner Fellow (Stanford University) and Grisham Writer in Residence at the University of Mississippi. She is an associate professor of Creative Writing at Tulane University.

Her work has appeared in BOMB, A Public Space and The Oxford American.

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5 stars
34 (70%)
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10 (20%)
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Displaying 1 - 27 of 27 reviews
Profile Image for emma.
2,616 reviews97k followers
Currently Reading
May 13, 2026
respair, n.
Perhaps: fresh hope, or recovery from despair.
This word is now obsolete.

Oxford English Dictionary
Profile Image for Andre(Read-A-Lot).
717 reviews330 followers
February 5, 2026
Jesmyn Ward! She is who I had in mind when I coined the word Prosey and created a Prosey Posse! So, even in her nonfiction her prose defies description. Prosey. I am filled with joy reading Jesmyn Ward even when she is writing of difficulties. Grief. Despair. Poverty. Loss. Longing.

When you produce a book of previously published essays, you usually get a lot of overlap, due to the collection being put together with pieces written over a number of years. But one thing that is crystal clear in this collection is how important reading was for her. Her yearning to be seen in literature was ever propulsive.

One cannot underestimate how desperate one can feel to be not only seen but have their existence validated. The way Jesmyn writes about that desperation is downright impressive and inspiring.

Standout essays include, You Tell Your Story: You Survive (Eudora Welty Lecture, address at the National Press Club), A Conflicted, Imperfect Love (Introduction, As I lay Dying, Vintage International edition) and the titular essay, In Witness and Respair: A Personal Tragedy Followed by a Pandemic. A lovely collection of writing from Jesmyn Ward destined to further solidifying her status as a literary luminary!!! Thanks to Scribner and Edelweiss for an advanced DRC. Book drops May, 2026
Profile Image for Becca Sloan.
523 reviews37 followers
February 22, 2026
When reading Jesmyn Ward, words like beautiful and masterpiece lose their meaning.
She tells her stories with truth and simplicity, and with intricacy and generosity and elegance. The word “handcrafted” comes to mind. I picture her plucking words from above her brow and placing them intentionally, rearranging them on the page until they make a piece of art.
This book of essays collects her work from the last couple of decades across publications, some of which I had read, some I had not. Putting them all together in the same place allows us to more easily connect the heartstrings of so much of her work. That heartbeat is that her stories, her family’s stories, Black stories, deserve to be told straight. That the pain is not to be dimmed but the beauty shouldn’t be dimmed a bit either. She explores Black artists and storytellers who have done this, and she practices it herself. She accomplishes it so beautifully, not offering a cheap hope that ignores reality, but as the last essay indicates, an unquenchable hope that is based in the strength of the people she has known and witnessed. I am so grateful that her grandmother taught her to “Tell it straight, tell it all.” And I am so grateful that she continues to open up her heart and share her stories with us.
Profile Image for 2raccoonsinacoat.
112 reviews3 followers
May 18, 2026
Everyone, everyone should read this book.

Jesmyn Ward is such a gifted storyteller. This collection of essays follows themes of family, racial injustice, growing up poor/Black in the south, grief, family, and identity. There are stories from her girlhood through adulthood, and they are all held in a net of such beautiful, raw observation that even I (a middle-class white woman from Oklahoma) felt it in my bones. These essays made me laugh, made me angry, made me feel shame and guilt for my complacency, and gave me appreciation for Black art I have been exposed to and will continue to seek out. Much like in our country’s history (and present), there is a lot of tragedy in this collection. Ward doesn’t shy away from it, though, and finds such beautiful hope in her experiences and roots. “This place that made me haunts me.” Beautiful prose, powerful message, and please just read it.

Thank you to Scribner and NetGalley for providing an advanced reader copy in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Michael.
3 reviews
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
April 30, 2026
I’ve been a fan of Jesmyn Ward ever since SALVAGE THE BONES, and I’ll read anything she writes. Her style is so lyrical and immersive, and that strength is fully on display in this essay collection.

These essays span personal grief, her upbringing in rural Mississippi, social justice, and the artists who have shaped her voice. The most powerful pieces are the deeply personal ones. they feel raw, intimate, and stayed with me long after I finished.

While a few essays lean more reflective and may feel slower at times, they still add depth to the collection as a whole. Ward’s insight and honesty make even the quieter moments meaningful.

Overall, this is a stunning, thoughtful collection. Ward writes with such clarity, emotion, and purpose. It's impossible not to be moved. This felt like getting closer to her as both a writer and a person. Truly a powerhouse. I’ll continue to read whatever she writes next.
Profile Image for Stephanie Carlson.
380 reviews18 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
May 7, 2026
**My thanks to Scribner for providing me with an advanced review copy via NetGalley**

4.5 stars

Jesmyn Ward is, in my opinion, one of the greatest living American writers, and so I was intrigued to see if I enjoyed her essays as much as I do her novels (some writers can really only do one). To my great pleasure Ward’s creative nonfiction style is just as engaging as her fiction, and I was so compelled by her personal narratives that I cried more than once while reading.

Ward also has sharp insights into contemporary Black American literature that will be enormously illuminating to any English students who choose to pick this book up.

I found Ward’s personal and political reflections the most compelling, and the articles and essays written to promote upcoming books and other art a little less so, probably because in this book of essays they sit more divorced from the immediate goals of their writing. However I still found great value in them, particularly in the essays where she describes an interview she’s had with another artist.

I would highly recommend this book to fans of Ward’s fiction work and to anyone, whether or not they have read Jesmyn Ward before, who is at all interested in contemporary American life and literature.
Profile Image for Holly Dyer.
547 reviews22 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
May 16, 2026
I loved this collection! Jesmyn Ward brings together essays she's written for different publications over the years, such as Vanity Fair, The Guardian, NPR, as well as forwards to classics like THE GREAT GATSBY, BLOODCHILD, AS I LAY DYING, and her anthology THE FIRE THIS TIME. She skillfully compiles them into a narrative about her life; her upbringing as a poor Black child in Mississippi and reckoning with race; the grief of losing beloved men in her life; recovering from disaster after Hurricane Katrina; and the books, writers (both dead and living), and artists who shaped her along the way. I was a little nervous how about how a collection of already-published essays would work, but this works really well. Her writing is so poignant, and I think I love her creative nonfiction writing even more than her fiction writing. I felt like I really got to know the author behind all of the books and literary accolades, seeing what forces in her life shaped her books like SALVAGE THE BONES and LET US DESCEND. Throughout the collection, she shows how she has born witness throughout her life and taps into "respair," or fresh hope after despair. Plus, it added many books to my TBR that I want to read ASAP.

Thanks to Scribner and NetGalley for the ARC.
Profile Image for Em.
251 reviews
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
January 23, 2026
In On Witness and Respair, Jesmyn Ward invites us into a deeply personal decade of her life. Ten years
of her life shaped by grief, return, motherhood, and the healing power of literature. These essays feel intimate and rooted in Mississippi as both a home place and a site of remembering.

Ward writes honestly about leaving for Stanford and feeling small and untethered, then finding her way back to herself through home and through the writers who mirrored her interior life including Octavia Butler, James Baldwin, and Toni Morrison.

I was moved most by the essays on loss and anticipatory grief: the death of her brother, the sudden death of her partner, and the fear and vigilance of raising a Black son in America. Ward’s prose is lyrical without being precious, piercing without spectacle. I finished this collection feeling like I know her better and feeling newly called to revisit her fiction with deeper understanding. This is a book about witnessing, survival, and the quiet hope that comes after life breaks your heart over and over again.
Profile Image for Reed Jones.
239 reviews1 follower
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
March 8, 2026
Thank you to NetGalley and Scribner for the advanced reader copy! All thoughts are my own:

A collection of essays from Jesmyn Ward about her upbringing in rural Mississippi, COVID, social justice, and the novels and writers that influenced her own storytelling.

I’m pretty selective with my nonfiction reads. I requested this one on NetGalley since it’s from my favorite author (and Mississippi native) and I’ve got tickets to attend her talk on this book at my local bookstore in May. Man am I glad to have read it.

The way Ward writes about Mississippi, the good and the bad, is the most accurate account ive ever read. In every one of her books ive read. The influence of these other authors she writes about here is clear throughout her other writings too.

However, I’ve found no one in literature that writes creative nonfiction as well as Ward. This book does a lot of things but at the top of that list for me is that it does Mississippi justice.

(The only nonfiction book I’ve ever read in one sitting [over like 150 pages, that is])
Profile Image for Sacha.
2,130 reviews
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
March 22, 2026
5 stars

Leave it to Jesmyn Ward to give us our word of the moment and a whole lot of fabulous content to show vs. tell.

I absolutely love Ward's fiction and could not wait to get my paws on this nonfiction collection. My very high expectations were not only met but - as is usual with this author - exceeded.

Having just come off a strong fictional work that was extremely sad, I appreciate Ward's "respair" focused perspective even more. Times are tough, and in these moments, we thrive in that sense of forthcoming hope and possibility. It's not always easy to find or hold onto, but these essays are constant memories and examples - including in the repeated introductions of specific personal losses - of how that hope can function and save us from our circumstances and ourselves.

Ward is a gift, and this collection is yet another compelling example of why.

*Special thanks to NetGalley and Scribner for this arc, which I received in exchange for an honest review. The opinions expressed here are my own.
Author 39 books75 followers
Review of advance copy
May 12, 2026
On Witness and Respair: Essays, by Jesmyn Ward
I received this book free as part of the May 2026 fundraiser lunch for the Madison Public Library.
This superb collection of essays is essentially a memoir, and a darn good one and perfect reading for the 250th U.S. birthday year. The author is a national book award winner twice over for other books, and reading her perfect prose was a treat. The subject matter is serious stuff about her life in coastal Mississippi as a child and later as a returning adult. The shock of her brother’s death affected me, as it should. I also gasped at how she and her neighbors barely survived the hurricanes and then had to live for months without help to rebuild or even find food at times. I learned from her honesty and the baring of her soul as a Black girl, sister, adult, college student, mother, widow—a woman who succeeded by becoming a writer. A highly recommended book!
Profile Image for Erin.
3,164 reviews427 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
January 12, 2026
ARC for review. To be published May 19, 2026.

5 stars

A collection of Ward’s essays, articles and speeches. It’s wonderful, though sometimes repetitive, since the parts were not intended to be a book; she recollects some events in her life several times, obviously. However, hearing some of them again was actually a treat.

I’ve been meaning to read Ward for years but the synopses of her books always make them sound so depressing. I must choose one and give it a try. She is a writer we need in our world today.

My favorite article was the title one, but her life: her Mississippi upbringing, Hurricane Katrina, COVID, the death of her partner, is fascinating, and she also includes profiles of some famous black artists. I was impressed by the lot. If you’ve read and admired Ward you should read this.
Profile Image for Yvette Sapp.
37 reviews
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
February 28, 2026
Thank you to Net Galley and Scribner for this Advance Reader’s Copy of On Witness and Respair.

Jesmyn Ward’s book features several essays that explore her childhood in Mississippi, living in New York after graduating from college, and what brings her back to her native Mississippi. Among her essays, three really impacted me: her transparency as she deals with navigating emotions with the loss of both her partner and her brother; her reflections as her community was impacted by Hurricane Katrina; and her thoughts on Ta-Nehisi Coates as they both worked on writing projects that told the stories of enslaved people. Her thoughts on raising a son in this current climate circles back to her writing about her family history of loss.

Ward’s ability to weave her reflections on poverty, grief, and how that impacts community is masterful. I highly recommend her book.
Profile Image for Andi_loves_2_read.
140 reviews6 followers
April 29, 2026
Jesmyn Ward is my favorite kind of writer - honest, deep, curious. She writes so the past is not forgotten and repeated. She keeps her ancestors alive by sharing their stories.
This book is a collection of essays that reads, to me, like a memoir. I enjoyed learning about what motivates Jesmyn Ward to write. I am a white woman, so I cannot relate to what it means to be black and seen as less than human, but I do my best to understand and innately I know that it isn’t right and it has to be faced and fixed. I want to hear the truth, especially when it isn’t pretty, because most likely if someone is writing about it, there’s hope involved too.
I recommend this book to everyone. Everyone should read it!
Thank you to Scribner & to NetGalley for the free ARC in exchange for my honest review.
Profile Image for Reader Ray.
336 reviews1 follower
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
May 17, 2026
On Witness and Respair
Jesmyn Ward
Publication Date: May 19, 2026

ARC courtesy of Scribner and NetGalley.

We have seen some very strong short story collections from big name authors in 2026. This time, from multi award-winning author Jesmyn Ward, with a collection of works of non-fiction including essays and an introductory speech entitled, On Witness and Respair.

Ward tells us of the importance of giving testimony and speaking out. She writes about experiences in her personal life, Black History, as well as reflections on literary figures including Toni Morrison, James Baldwin and Octavia Butler. It is about coping after tragedy and loss, and how bearing witness can lead to hope, as, after falling, we get up and move on.

Profile Image for Morgan Fulton.
261 reviews7 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
April 13, 2026
I always struggle to rate books of essays, as it throws me off when a collection lacks cohesiveness. It's unsurprising to me that the essays that spoke on Katrina, personal grief, and growing up/coming back to Mississippi felt the most poignant. The essays detailing other authors/artists/people in history just didn't hit for for me, even when I was interested in the person being written about. That being said, I ultimately think that Jesmyn Ward can do no wrong, and I will read anything she puts out.
Profile Image for Laura.
474 reviews
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
May 12, 2026
Jesmyn Ward is a national treasure. I hadn't read her non-fiction before, so it was a treat to sit down with her essays and contemplate her ideas of growing up poor in the deep South, deciding to return home to Mississippi even after getting her BA and MFA elsewhere, losing her husband at the beginning of Covid, and more. Because these essays were published over a period of about ten years, certain stories do resurface, which can make the collection feel repetitive by the end, but that's no fault of the author since these were originally each meant to stand alone.
Profile Image for Linden.
2,205 reviews1 follower
Review of advance copy received from Edelweiss+
March 27, 2026
Jesmyn Ward starts out by telling us that her grandmother was a storyteller. Ward continues that tradition, talking about Black writers and artists and her grief at losing both her brother and her husband. She specks extensively about her childhood in rural Mississippi, and how that experience continues to influence her as an adult. Thanks to Edelweiss and the publisher for the ARC.
Profile Image for Sharon Layburn.
1,920 reviews30 followers
Review of advance copy received from Edelweiss+
April 9, 2026
4.5 stars
I devoured every word of Ward's On Witness and Respair, an eclectic essay collection which was full of hard truths and lyrical writing, as one would expect from this literary powerhouse.

Thank you to Scribner/Simon & Schuster for allowing access to this digital ARC through Edelweiss+
Profile Image for Danielle.
1,281 reviews94 followers
Read
May 16, 2026
I cannot give this a star rating because these are personal essays. But man, Jesmyn can write. Enjoyment isn’t the correct word for how I feel about these essays. But they’re moving and heartbreaking and just so lovely to reads.

Thank too Simon Audio for the advanced listeners copy.
Profile Image for Shannon A.
431 reviews22 followers
Review of advance copy
March 16, 2026
This collection is as unflinching and moving as it is refreshing and resilient.
Profile Image for Sydney.
11 reviews1 follower
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
March 25, 2026
Loved the writing about her family and growing up in Mississippi. Not as good as her fiction and previous memoirs.
2,599 reviews54 followers
March 7, 2026
Some absolutely fantastic essays from Jesmyn Ward, ranging from book intros to writing about her experiences in Hurricane Katrina and Covid, and existing as a Black woman in the hellscape that is modern America, while still finding joy in her family and to be able to continue on. Comes out in May, and highly recommended when it does.
Profile Image for Kara.
795 reviews394 followers
March 17, 2026
"I shoulder past accusations of trauma porn, of trying to make people feel bad abut themselves and history, of exploiting poverty, of gross exaggeration, and I tell this American story. I tell this Southern gothic, this Mississippi tale. I write toward what hurts. I write toward the truth, and I tell it again. I scribe the whole."

This book, like everything Jesmyn Ward writes, is beautiful. She writes about hard truths lyrically, and I learned things and was moved.

Four rather than five stars because this fell short for me as a collection. I appreciated all of these as individual pieces, but I felt like it fell a little short as a whole.

Thank you to NetGalley and Scribner!
7 reviews
Review of advance copy received from Goodreads Giveaways
May 5, 2026
Jasmine Ward has a way of writing where it is poetic yet still simple and straightforward. I was moved most by the essays on loss and grief. I think we can all relate to those deeper feelings of loss. However, it makes you think about Respair. The fresh hope that comes after despair. Its a deeply moving book that I recommend.
Displaying 1 - 27 of 27 reviews