The questions that change everything.

Sarah found her mother's diary three weeks after the funeral. Twenty-three pages from 1967—the year her mom was seventeen. She read every word. But page twenty-four was blank. The rest of the diary, empty. The silence was unbearable. Why did you stop writing? What were you afraid of? Who did you love before Dad? She would never know. Sarah created Keeper because millions of us are walking around with the same unasked questions. The same aching distance. There's still time. But not much.

  • Questions you'll wish you had asked

    While they're still here to answer

  • Their handwriting becomes your heirloom

    Tangible proof they lived, they loved, they mattered

  • Built to Last Generations

    Premium A5 hardcover with acid-free paper ensures this keepsake remains beautiful for 100+ years.

  • No awkward silence

    the prompts make vulnerability feel natural

     
     

    What others say

    Excellent 4.8 / 5

    Based on 362 reviews

    • I wish I'd done this sooner

      "I learned more about my dad in these pages than I did in thirty years. I only wish I'd started sooner."

      - Sarah M.

    • My most precious possession

      "When Mom passed, this journal became the most precious thing I own. Her handwriting brings her back."

      - David K.

    • Made it so easy

      "The questions made it so easy. No awkwardness. Just real, beautiful conversations I'll never forget."

      - Emily R.

    • I finally understand her

      "My mom opened up in ways she never had before. I discovered stories I never knew existed—and now I understand where I come from."

      - Rachel T.

    • A gift we both needed

      "Dad was hesitant at first, but now he looks forward to filling it out. It's brought us closer than we've been in years."

      - Michael P.

    • Worth every penny

      "This isn't just a journal, it's a time capsule. My kids will treasure this when they're older. Best purchase I've ever made."

      - Amanda G.

       
       

      Don't let "I wish I had asked" be your story.

      The scariest thing about death isn't that they're gone - it's realizing how little you knew them while they were here.