The Year of Magical Thinking is really a particularly lovely book. Didion expounds on her lamenting cycle after the passing of her better half and her little girl's hospitalization in a particularly genuine and profound manner.
She subtleties her battles with sanity in the meantime and her possessions over the little realities and subtleties of these occasions.
Albeit the book is well defined for Didion's own life and misfortune, it's as yet conceivable to find appeal inside its pages, which I think simply addresses the comprehensiveness of the human experience.
While I for one haven't encountered the sort of distress that Didion investigates, I realize that the course of life renders it unavoidable, yet I discover some solace in realizing that I can constantly return to this book throughout the next few years.
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