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Whistler

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The acclaimed, prize-winning #1 New York Times bestselling writer returns with a moving, luminous novel that reminds us of the sweetness and impermanence of life and the power of connection to defy time.

When Daphne Fuller and her husband Jonathan visit the Metropolitan Museum of Art, they notice an older, white-haired gentleman following them. The man turns out to be Eddie Triplett, her former stepfather, who had been married to her mother for a little more than year when Daphne was nine. Now fifty-three, Daphne hasn’t seen Eddie for many years, not since the fateful event that changed the direction of both their lives. Meeting again, time falls away; while their relationship was brief, it had a profound impact on them both, and now that they are reunited, they have no intention of ever being separated again.

Whistler is a story about two adults looking back over the choices they made, and the choices that were made for them. It’s a story about bravery, memory, the often small yet consequential moments that define our lives, and the endless stream of loss that in time comes for us all. Beautiful in its simplicity, it is ultimately about how love endures, and how the feeling of being known by one other person, even for a short period of time, can change everything.

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First published June 2, 2026

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About the author

Ann Patchett

77 books30.1k followers
Patchett was born in Los Angeles, California. Her mother is the novelist Jeanne Ray.

She moved to Nashville, Tennessee when she was six, where she continues to live. Patchett said she loves her home in Nashville with her doctor husband and dog. If asked if she could go any place, that place would always be home. "Home is ...the stable window that opens out into the imagination."

Patchett attended high school at St. Bernard Academy, a private, non-parochial Catholic school for girls run by the Sisters of Mercy. Following graduation, she attended Sarah Lawrence College and took fiction writing classes with Allan Gurganus, Russell Banks, and Grace Paley. She later attended the Iowa Writers' Workshop at the University of Iowa and the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown, Massachusetts, where she met longtime friend Elizabeth McCracken. It was also there that she wrote her first novel, The Patron Saint of Liars.

In 2010, when she found that her hometown of Nashville no longer had a good book store, she co-founded Parnassus Books with Karen Hayes; the store opened in November 2011. In 2012, Patchett was on the Time 100 list of most influential people in the world by TIME magazine.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 30 of 540 reviews
Profile Image for emma.
2,631 reviews97.6k followers
June 4, 2026
i have a reason to live.

or i did, until i finished reading this book.

i did not want it to end.

i've enjoyed just about everything ann patchett has ever written, but she's been especially on one of late.

her novels are like a fantasy to me, a world nearly like our own, where people are imperfect and their actions can hurt but they are always, invariably, comprehensible to those who care to consider. they are unyieldingly trying their best.

these are worlds full of well-spoken, well-read, well-loved people, who carry their pasts with them but move forever forward. they live in cozy homes in interesting places. they have open hearts. to me, that is everything.

patchett writes with a skill and thoughtfulness essentially unparalleled. she brings kindness to literary fiction and literary quality to pleasurable reading.

this story of a woman's childhood returning to her adulthood, of paths greatly desired and unknown, of even regrets in their bitterness containing sweetness, of the unexpected loves of one's life...

i couldn't have appreciated it more.

bottom line: i am grateful for this book.

(thanks to libro.fm for the alc)
(read for a substack post)
Profile Image for Angela M .
1,492 reviews2,103 followers
December 1, 2025
“There were things I remembered now, including that particular longing that life could stay as it had been. How strange that such a pointless wish could resurface after all these years.” Still, Daphne Fuller at fifty three, imagines at times what life would have been like these last forty four years, had her mother not divorced her step-father Eddie and separated her from this man who she loves deeply. Reconnecting with Eddie after all those years turns out to be a beautiful thing for both of them as they relive the past, their indelible bond of love and shared trauma, and now can bask in the joy of finding each other again. Patchett reminds us, though that life is complicated, relationships are complex and families are messy.

In this novel marriages are made based on love, but unrealistic expectations make promises of good intentions impossible to keep in spite of the fact that the love remains. Ann Patchett does an extraordinary job at getting to the very heart of broken families and the effect on lives as time passes. She reminds us that things are not always as they seem and the whole story needs to be revealed. And so the story of this family unfolds, reflecting on the past, accepting the present and moving forward each day with the light of the revelations that tell of so much love.

I’ve read all of Ann Patchett’s novels and two memoirs and loved them all. Whistler is reminiscent of her more recent novels The Dutch House, Commonwealth, and Tom Lake , all of which focus on families . If you loved any of those, I think you’ll find that she once again establishes herself as a literary treasure.

I received a copy of this book from HarperCollins through Edelweiss.
Profile Image for Liz Hein.
518 reviews515 followers
November 26, 2025
I woke my husband up from a deep sleep to make him read the last paragraph of this. So here’s, a quick little personal review of Whistler…I’ll write a full and real review closer to its June publication.

Sometimes a book comes to you at the perfect time. I was sitting at the airport with my mom and husband last night, waiting to fly to our family in Texas for Thanksgiving. We ALWAYS host at my parents house; it’s my mom’s very favorite holiday. But we lost dad this year, and can’t fathom our normal routine without him. I had no idea Whistler was a father/daughter story, but I knew I loved Ann Patchett and something told me to just log into netgalley to see if maybe it had popped up, despite having tried to find it literally that morning and it wasn’t there.

I devoured this. The father daughter story isn’t like mine in most ways, but was exactly like mine in the ways I didn’t know I needed it to be. This book is so special to me for so many reasons, and again, I’ll share more later. For now, what I think you should know is that this book is nice and lovely in the ways Tom Lake was nice and lovely. And this book healed me in small ways I won’t forget.
Profile Image for Ron Charles.
1,176 reviews51.4k followers
June 2, 2026
Ann Patchett’s new novel, Whistler, is that loveliest of summer gifts, a story of reconciliation, of old affections renewed, of a family’s circumference enlarged. Fans of the author’s previous work will open these pages like an old shoebox of family photos. Newcomers — how I envy them those first moments — will discover a writer of gentle wit and quiet grace.

Whistler, Patchett’s 10th novel, may be her most essayistic and in that sense her most confident. This is a reflection on fatherhood largely unruffled by the exigencies of plot. You’ll wait in vain for the terror of Bel Canto or the thrills of State of Wonder. Yes, it contains a moment of real peril, but the sting of fear has been mellowed over time like onions caramelized by heat.

Whistler begins in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, but unlike Donna Tartt’s novel The Goldfinch, the explosion that takes place is merely a chance encounter that blows away four decades of separation. One day while strolling through Modern and Contemporary Paintings, Daphne and her husband become aware that an older gentleman is following her. She’s not particularly....

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654 reviews353 followers
June 2, 2026
In September 2020, as the number of Covid fatalities climbed around the world, Ann Patchett published an article in The New Yorker with the title “My Three Fathers.” The autobiographical piece was about the three men her mother married over the course of her life and Ms Patchett’s very different relationships with each of them. Near the end of the article she wrote, “What’s so easy for me to see now that all of them are gone, what was so impossible for me to see at the time, was that they were only occasionally thinking of me, and I was only occasionally thinking of them. From each of the fathers I took the things I needed, and then I turned them into stories.”

Which is what she has done — at least as a framework and a starting point * — in her newest novel, “Whistler.” It’s a touching, insightful, revelatory story about the connections we form in our lives with others and what, despite everything, stays in our hearts through the passing years. It’s also about how difficult and complex our relationships with others can be and how little we understand of our own pasts.

The book’s protagonist is Daphne Fuller. She’s a writing teacher at a private girl's school to whom, inexplicably and interestingly, older men are drawn (“Old guys love me”). Her mother, like Ann Patchett’s, married three times. One day, Daphne and her retired hospital administrator husband Jonathan are spending a quiet afternoon walking through the Metropolitan Museum of Art in Manhattan when Jonathan leans in toward Daphne to tell her they’re being followed. Daphne thinks he's being ridiculous, but as it happens, they are being followed. Or more accurately, she is. The “old guy” following her is no stranger, he's her former stepfather Eddie Triplett, whom she hasn’t seen for almost 45 years. To her great surprise, Daphne begins to sob uncontrollably. “I hadn’t known there was something in me to break, but there was and break it did. I stepped into an open crack in time and fell backwards.” Fell backwards into a place she had put away somewhere in the back of her mind and forgotten: “For me, the past was a sinkhole. Not that it was terrible, but there was nothing for me there.”

Over the course of the novel, Daphne and Eddie renew their old relationship, which is a very different thing now that the bond is between two adults rather than between a child and an adult. As a young girl, Daphne had adored Eddie, shared a harrowing experience with him. The two of them had a very special bond. Then something happened and Eddie was gone.

“In the way of all children,” Daphne believed that the divorce was her fault. It wasn’t her fault, of course. Nor is her long-held belief that she had ruined Eddie’s life. As she and Eddie spend more time together she will learn that the memories she formed as a child and that shaped so much of her adult life were completely wrong. The dramatic events she remembers so vividly did not happen as she remembered them. It’s a difficult and emotionally draining process (“I’m too old to be nine again”) that forces her to feel things she hadn't felt before, reappraise a great many things about herself and others close to her, particularly because Eddie is dying.

As she gets to know the real Eddie — as he was and is — she is forced to face a lot of things about herself and those she is close to. One day she has a conversation with her sister Leda — a psychologist who writes a column called “Your Therapist” — in which the two of them discuss their childhood. Their mother, Leda says, “decided the past was happy and so she has no reason to think about it.” When Daphne asks where the two of them fit into that narrative, her sister’s response is direct: “ ‘We don’t,” she said.’"

(Daphne's relationship with her mother is a fascinating thread to follow in the book. Daphne will wonder,“Why did my mother always make me feel like a telemarketer calling to rope her into a time-share?” and make this observation: "I couldn't say exactly where childhood ends, but dealing with your pregnant mother at the age of thirteen was as good a place as any to wrap it up.")

I found “Whistler” to be a quietly powerful look at how memory works, how little we know about what makes others — and ourselves — act the way they do, the things that bind us to one another, and looking honestly into our past. In other hands it might have been maudlin or manipulative, but Patchett is at her best here. Truthfully, I want to say as little as possible about “Whistler” because inside Daphne's head as she learns about herself and her past is such a joy. Patchett rolls out the story with honesty, tenderness, and insight. I have to say, I identified with a lot in the book, not always comfortably. I believe others will too.

My deepest thanks to Harper Publishers and Edelweis+ for providing a free digital ARC in return for an honest review.


* In an interview with Publisher’s Weekly,” Ms Patchett spoke about her discomfort writing a novel about a character who had three fathers just as she did: “I thought, oh, I can’t do that, because people will think it’s me. But I decided, I don’t care what people think. It’s right for the book.”
Profile Image for Michelle.
755 reviews788 followers
January 4, 2026
4.5 stars

Wonderful characters make this story shine. A little slower paced (as most character driven stories are), but well worth the read.

Of the previous books I've read (Commonwealth, The Dutch House, Tom Lake) and now this one, this ranks up there with The Dutch House.

Thank you to Harper Books & Netgalley for the gifted egalley in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Ellen.
545 reviews
May 30, 2026
I am an Ann Patchett completist. I have read everything she has written at least once; some of her books, three or more times. I flew to Nashville for the release of Tom Lake and to visit her bookstore, Parnassus Books. Suffice it to say, I am a fan.

This may be her best. I am gutted, the tear tracks on my face not yet dry. I'll leave a more detailed review when I've collected myself a bit, but for now, know this one is a real beauty.
Profile Image for Shantha (ShanthasBookEra).
598 reviews104 followers
May 25, 2026
4.25 stars "The acclaimed, prize-winning #1 New York Times bestselling writer returns with a moving, luminous novel that reminds us of the sweetness and impermanence of life and the power of connection to defy time."

When Daphne Fuller and her husband are at the Met, her husband Jonathan thinks they are being followed. It turns out to be her long lost stepfather who she hasn't seen since a fateful evening changed their lives when she was nine years old. Now fifty-three, Daphne is determined not to lose the one adult in her life that made her feel seen.

Ann Patchett has returned with a powerful family saga. The nuances, complexity, secrets, and misunderstandings that so easily occur. It sheds a light on the importance of simple acts between family members making a big difference. It is illuminating and masterful. Patchett uses an embedded narrative device (a story within a story) to explore various themes which are universal to mankind. It is beautiful and focused on different relationships within a family. How they can grow and change over time with simple communication, forgiveness and understanding. I highly recommend adding this to your TBR.

Many thanks to NetGalley, Harper and Ann Patchett for the gifted advance reader's copy. All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Bonny.
1,053 reviews25 followers
December 10, 2025
Ann Patchett has always had a gift for writing about the quiet, powerful moments that shape us, but Whistler feels like something even more tender and resonant, a novel that hums with memory, regret, and the kind of love that never fully lets go. From the very first pages, I was completely absorbed.

The story begins with a chance encounter at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, where Daphne Fuller and her husband notice an older man trailing behind them. It turns out to be Eddie Triplett, Daphne’s former stepfather from decades earlier. What unfolds from that moment is a luminous, deeply human exploration of time, connection, and the strange ways our past selves remain alive inside us. Patchett writes their reunion with such grace that it feels both miraculous and inevitable.

This is a novel about the choices we make and the ones made for us, about how small events can redirect entire lives, and how love, unexpected, unconventional, or fleeting, can echo for years. Patchett captures the fragility of memory and the incredible feeling of simply being known by someone else. The book is understated but emotionally expansive, filled with those sharp little truths the author inserts so delicately you don’t realize how deeply they’ve settled until you feel the tug in your chest.

Whistler will absolutely be one of my top books of 2025. In fact, finishing it has left me with the distinct (and slightly comical) worry that there may not be much to look forward to (book-wise) in 2026 because I may have already read the best book that will be published during that year. It’s that moving, that beautifully crafted, and that unforgettable. A quiet masterpiece that I will re-read several times before publication on June 2, 2026.

Thank you to Edelweiss and Harper for providing me with a copy of this stellar book.
Profile Image for Alena.
1,103 reviews314 followers
June 3, 2026
“I couldn't say exactly where childhood ends, but dealing with your pregnant mother at the age of 13 was as good a place as any to wrap it up."


That’s just the kind of line that makes me love Ann Patchett. Especially because it implies that this book is about coming of age, family dysfunction and even anger. And sure, all of those elements come into play, but this book is not “about” any of that. In fact, I would go as far as to say this is a book about love, reconciliation and the bonds that connect us forever. Oh, and also a back story that adds an element of suspense to the story.

“There were things I remembered now, including that particular longing that life could stay as it had been. How strange that such a pointless wish could resurface after all these years.”


Patchett toys with memory, with longing, with the definitions of family and it’s all brilliant. I read this novel in 2 sittings over 24 hours because I could not let it go. And I very much wish I weren’t done with it.

I loved how the story unfolded so slowly and earnestly. I believed the hearts of these slightly damaged people who managed to avoid anger at the world even though life is utterly unfair. There was certainly the friction I appreciate in good literary fiction, but there was also abundant light and love which feels like a real treat these days.

"I have found that when you start to wonder about who you've hurt in this life, you can easily lose your mind."
Profile Image for Matt.
1,020 reviews270 followers
May 18, 2026
we ride at dawn for Eddie
Profile Image for leah.
553 reviews3,583 followers
June 1, 2026
ann patchett’s books are honestly such a balm. i’ve only read her novel tom lake before this, but both times i’ve found them wholesome, life-affirming, and heartwarming. she’s able to strike an emotional tone that i could find mawkish with other authors, but somehow here it just works.

3.75

thank you bloomsbury for the advanced copy!!
Profile Image for Jaclyn.
Author 56 books842 followers
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May 15, 2026
A beautiful return to form for Patchett (you guys were too kind with Tom Lake). This novel is in many ways a companion to her essay My Three Fathers (which I highly recommend you read). Patchett in full flight is a sight to behold. What a great year for fiction!
Profile Image for Louis Muñoz.
389 reviews213 followers
June 1, 2026
5 stars; magnificent. Going in, I wasn't sure what this book would be, but very quickly, I fell in love, with the characters, with the writing, with the structure, and through Ann Patchett's magic, the world. More to come, but in the meantime, STRONGLY recommend.
Profile Image for Alexa.
208 reviews
March 6, 2026
Gosh, someone send help. I don’t think this is for everyone, but it was for me.
Profile Image for Ellery Adams.
Author 63 books5,396 followers
June 4, 2026
This is a beautiful novel about soulmates, but not in the sense the word is commonly used. In this case, a woman named Daphne reunites with the stepfather (Eddie) she hasn't seen in decades after a chance encounter at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Both are delighted to be in each other's company again, and as they catch up on the years they've missed, Daphne learns that Eddie is gay, and has never come out of the closet. Together, these two people who never stopped loving each other, revisit old memories and make new ones together. The book is full of small, tender moments between characters I felt I knew very well right from the beginning.
Profile Image for Lauren.
454 reviews64 followers
January 28, 2026
Thank you to Harper for the ARC. This was an incredibly character-driven story about a woman in her 50s connecting with her ex-step father after 44 years apart. The story is basically a bunch of recollections of the past and the main character randomly remembering events that she had blocked out from when she was 9. Nothing really happened so I didn’t like this at all. Also, why do authors insist on writing stories where queer people only know how to lie and cheat? It’s getting so old.
Profile Image for Lou.
292 reviews22 followers
May 31, 2026
This is nearly perfect for me. 4.5
Profile Image for Brooke Lona.
130 reviews3 followers
May 4, 2026
Daphne Fuller is a middle-aged woman whose career revolves around books. She has had three fathers, she never had children of her own, and she married someone who works in healthcare. In other words, Daphne Fuller is Ann Patchett.

I genuinely just could not get these parallels and the autobiographical elements out of my head while I was reading - it felt like I was just reading her life story, like in These Precious Days.

I also generally love Ann Patchett (which is why i'm sad about this 🥲) but in this book her writing style really struck me as if she were trying too hard to be understanding with all of the characters. Daphne states that she has negative feelings towards some of the characters, but I didn't feel that come through in the writing. Her writing style is soft and comforting, and I just don't know if that fully conveys the message of this story in the most impactful way.
Profile Image for Sarah.
484 reviews80 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
January 21, 2026
Patchett strikes again! WHISTLER pulled me in from the opening scene and held me the whole way through. It didn't go where I thought it would because Ann doesn't write predictable stories.

"How was it that a weekday trip to a museum with my husband had plunged me back into childhood at the age of fifty three?"

Set then and now, Daphne and Eddie's story reminds us that it's never too late to heal and mend a family.
Profile Image for Annie Tate Cockrum.
488 reviews87 followers
March 16, 2026
Magical! Ann Patchett is amazing at writing about families. In Whitsler we follow a woman, in her early fifties, who runs into her former step father who she hasn’t seen since childhood - from there we go back and forth in time to get a gorgeous and very full picture of these people. It was so wonderful and addictive to read - I couldn’t put it down!

Lately I’ve been feeling annoyed by writers hitting us over the head with sentimentality but Patchett is able to skirt around that while still making the book and characters emotional. She doesn’t hold our hand through anything either which I really appreciate.

Very thankful to have read an advanced copy of Whistler and recommend everyone to snag a copy on June 2nd.
Profile Image for Cindy.
447 reviews106 followers
June 4, 2026

How can someone you spent only a brief period of time with in your youth leave such a lasting mark on your life? That’s the question at the heart of Whistler by Ann Patchett. While touring the Met in NYC with her husband, Daphne unexpectedly runs into Eddie, her former stepfather, whom she hasn’t seen since her mother’s divorce decades ago when she was a child. Now in his seventies and still working in publishing, Eddie reenters her life, and over the course of just a few days the two reconnect and reflect on the years that have passed and a shared traumatic experience.

Much of the novel is quiet and contemplative, built on conversations, memories, and introspection. As I read, I found myself wondering whether Patchett could convince me that such a deep and meaningful connection could still exist between two people separated for so long. Well… what really mattered was that I cared deeply about both Daphne and Eddie and was fully invested in their story. Patchett does well with creating characters who feel real, flaws and all, and whose lives linger in your mind long after finishing the book.

Beautiful in its simplicity, Whistler is ultimately a reflection on love, family, and the ways certain relationships endure despite the passage of time. Sometimes years and even decades seem to fall away when we reconnect with someone who once mattered to us. Time moves on, but the feelings and influence people leave behind can remain surprisingly unchanged. This was a wonderfully written novel that flowed effortlessly, and one that had me reflecting on my own life and the people who made an impact.
Profile Image for Ashley Gordon.
272 reviews11 followers
May 17, 2026
A chance encounter at the Met reunites Daphne Fuller with her former stepfather, a man she hasn't seen in more than 40 years since his brief marriage to her mother ended in divorce. Though Eddie was only part of her family for a short time, Daphne formed a lasting bond with him after they shared a harrowing experience the family never truly confronted.

This quiet story accomplishes so much with effortless pacing. It's a thoughtful exploration of memory, storytelling, sacrifice, and resilience. It may be my favorite Patchett work yet.

Thanks to NetGalley and HarperCollins for the ARC!
Profile Image for Shellie.
645 reviews6 followers
June 2, 2026
AUDIO: Patchett narrates this one herself. Such a delight to hear her voice and her words.
I'm not going to do a summary of the novel, but I will tell you how it made me feel. Patchett (similar to author Catherine Newman--Sandwich & Wreck) makes the mundane feel both spectacular and important. Her words tell me to wake up and enjoy the everyday, the conversations, and the simple act of being human.
Profile Image for Stephanie Bivens.
43 reviews5 followers
March 18, 2026
There’s a beautiful through line spanning the breadth of Ann Patchett’s works, and in my opinion, Whistler is the pinnacle of it all. If you’re not a Patchett enthusiast yet (you will be!), my one request before diving in would be that you first read her lovely New Yorker articles, My Three Fathers and Glowworms, and your experience will be that much richer for it. I’ll have more to say after I’ve fully digested it, but this may be Patchett’s best work to date. Six stars.
57 reviews2 followers
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February 18, 2026
What my good friend Ann understands is that life is so funny and so beautiful
Displaying 1 - 30 of 540 reviews