After the death of her father, Clara returns to the old house where she grew up, carrying a grief too quiet for most people to notice and too deep for her to ignore. There, in a neglected garden once lovingly tended, she begins the slow and difficult work of facing everything she has left unattended within herself.
As Clara clears paths overrun by weeds and turns the hardened earth back toward life, she is drawn into a deeper reckoning with memory, loss, and the hidden ways sorrow shapes a life. Guided by her father's notebooks, the unexpected tenderness of a few quiet presences, and the fragile persistence of things still growing beneath the surface, she begins to understand that not everything lost disappears. Some things remain in another form.
Tender, luminous, and deeply human, The Garden of Lost Things is a story about grief, inheritance, emotional resilience, and the quiet ways the soul learns to bloom again.