Divorce is the Worst Written and illustrated by Anastasia Higginbotham
Kids are told, “it’s for the best”—and one day, it may be. But right now, divorce is the worst. With honesty and humor, Anastasia Higginbotham beautifully conveys the challenge of staying whole when your entire world, and the people in it, split apart.
Four years after its initial release, Dottir Press is bringing Divorce Is the Worst back into print and into the hands of those adults doing the important work of processing life’s Ordinary Terrible Things with children.
Exceptional in its child-centered portrayal, Divorce Is the Worst is an invaluable tool for families, therapeutic professionals, and divorce mediators struggling to address this common and complex experience.
Kids are told, “it’s for the best”—and one day, it may be. But right now, divorce is the worst. With honesty and humor, Anastasia Higginbotham beautifully conveys the challenge of staying whole when your entire world, and the people in it, split apart.
Four years after its initial release, Dottir Press is bringing Divorce Is the Worst back into print and into the hands of those adults doing the important work of processing life’s Ordinary Terrible Things with children.
Exceptional in its child-centered portrayal, Divorce Is the Worst is an invaluable tool for families, therapeutic professionals, and divorce mediators struggling to address this common and complex experience.
Kids are told, “it’s for the best”—and one day, it may be. But right now, divorce is the worst. With honesty and humor, Anastasia Higginbotham beautifully conveys the challenge of staying whole when your entire world, and the people in it, split apart.
Four years after its initial release, Dottir Press is bringing Divorce Is the Worst back into print and into the hands of those adults doing the important work of processing life’s Ordinary Terrible Things with children.
Exceptional in its child-centered portrayal, Divorce Is the Worst is an invaluable tool for families, therapeutic professionals, and divorce mediators struggling to address this common and complex experience.