About Us

Who We Are

Warwick Dunnett is an author, father, and seeker who turned his deepest grief into a journey of discovery. After the sudden loss of his 20-year-old son, he set out to answer the questions that haunt us all: What happens after we die? How do we find hope when everything falls apart? Through honest exploration of faith, spirituality, and the human experience, Warwick writes to offer comfort and companionship to anyone walking through the valley of loss.

Our Mission

To provide an honest, compassionate exploration of grief, faith, and life's biggest questions. We believe that loss doesn't have to mean the end of hope and that forming our own belief system in our darkest moments can lead us towards unexpected light.

Our Vission

Our vision is simply to create a website and bookshop that covers our costs or makes a small profit while offering great books that help people.

Values

Honesty–We approach the questions of life with a truth-seeking mindset, not with simple answers.
Compassion – every reader deserves empathy, dignity, and understanding.
Hope – even in the darkest valleys, there is light to be found.
Connection – Grief isolates us; we believe in the power of shared human experience.
Courage – asking life's hardest questions takes bravery, which we deeply respect.

About Warwick Dunnett

Warwick Dunnett spent decades flying around the world as a Boeing -747 Captain. Nothing in that career prepared him for the experience of suddenly losing a child or a loved one. He wrote Dance with Angels and is sharing other books he loves to help people feel happiness and live with loss, just as he has.

Warwick never expected to write a book about grief. Still, not long after the unnecessary loss of his son in a medical insurance scam, he discovered that others with a religious or spiritual belief recover more quickly from the depths of grief. He wanted answers, and something to believe in — or at least something that made sense, so he went searching for it.

That search led him to compare religions, spirituality, science, psychology, and the study of consciousness. Not to become an expert in any of them, but to understand whether anything could explain what happens after death — and whether meaning could be built from the ruins of loss.

Along the way, he discovered that each tradition is often very flawed, but each holds a piece of the puzzle he needed to rebuild. For him, healing came from taking the most grounded, truthful elements of each perspective and shaping them into a personal understanding of life, death, and what might lie beyond.

Today, he writes not as an authority, but as a father who survived the unimaginable — and as someone who believes that, even after terrible loss, we can learn to laugh again, not cry.