by Marie Voiron · 184 pages · epub + pdf · April 2026
A long, careful book about the slow weather of divorce. Not a workbook. Not a manifesto. A hand on the shoulder, in paragraphs — for the person who is tired of being sold to, tired of being cheered up, and just wants something honest to read at the kitchen table.
There is no clean hour at which a divorce begins. It starts in weather — some weeks before you have a name for it, in a kitchen, at a dinner that ran too long, in the specific kind of silence that follows a sentence you both agreed to pretend you didn't hear.
This is a book for the weather, not the papers. The papers are easy; a lawyer will walk you through them. What's hard is the afternoon, the empty passenger seat on a grocery run, the moment you find one of their receipts in your coat pocket three months later and have to decide, in real time, what to do with the feeling that arrives.
We are going to go slow. This is a long book on purpose. There are no worksheets. There are no bullet points. I am not going to ask you to rate your feelings one through ten, because feelings do not come out of a faucet and the number would not mean anything even if they did.
Exactly what was on the tin. No upsells, no tier gates, no "contact us for pricing" once I was in. Shipped in an afternoon and the docs were readable by a human.
I've bought half the catalogue at this point. The voice is consistent, the prices are honest, and the updates actually land. It's what indie shipping should look like.
Did what the page said it would do. Knocked off half a star because I wish there was a Windows native build — I'm on WSL and it works but feels like a workaround. Support replied to me in four hours.
I bought it at 11pm, downloaded it at 11:01pm, had it running at midnight. That's the whole review. Email went to a person who answered the next morning.
The amount of thought in the copy alone makes this worth the price. And that's before you get to the actual product. Rare to see this level of care at indie prices.
Swapped out my previous tool for this one last sprint. Fewer features, honestly — but the ones that are here are the ones I actually use. Don't miss the rest.