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The Year of Magical Thinking by Joan Didion is a critically acclaimed memoir exploring grief with journalistic precision and emotional depth. Securely packaged and built with durable binding, this bestseller is a must-have for professionals seeking profound literary insight and a meaningful addition to their collection.

| Best Sellers Rank | #19,087 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #22 in Biographies of Authors #40 in Self-Help for Death & Grief #197 in Relationships |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 4,051 Reviews |
C**T
Adorei!
Livro tocante e muito bem escrito.
M**Y
Outstanding
Didion gives us the privilege of spending a year with her. A year in which her husband dies of a massive heart attack at the table as they sit down for dinner, and a year in which her only child hangs onto life by a thread in intensive care suffering from one potentially fatal illness after another. Didion's prose is always lucid, but here the crisp journalistic approach to her subject is muted by her personal odyssey, her frantic need to try to understand and get to grips with events and feelings that are not as easily pinned down or understood as the hard facts and figures she reads and writes about, trying to give herself something to use as an anchor point in her rapidly disintegrating life. Other reviewers have commented on her lack of warmth, her obsessive compulsion to log the minutiae of the days that follow her husband's death and suggested that this means that she is cold. Far from it in my opinion. At the beginning of the book she talks about the strange split in one's psyche when someone close to you dies, the feeling that the world has shattered apart and will never be the same again. Yet at the same time one is obliged to continue living life as if unaffected because our modern sensibilities do not allow for outpourings of raw grief. Then there is the fact that even if we grieve more ostentatiously, the world with all its drab little facts continues turning whether we like it or not. Didion walks the tightrope between a grief so profound that she dare not throw away her husband's shoes in case he comes back and needs them, and the fact that she has to be present in the world for her daughter. She clings to the pragmatic, to the facts, like a drowning woman grabbing a life raft. Her prose is exquisite, much like her pain. An astonishing book.
A**R
Enjoyed this read.
Great memoir from a exceptional writer.
P**.
Exceptional
Exceptionally gifted author. I wept for her grief, prayed for health for her daughter and applauded her courage. This book hits every thought, deep feeling, confusion, frenzy, grief stricken emotion one experiences at the dramatic sudden loss of a spouse.
L**E
Perfect
The book itself is intact and was not scratched whatsoever. And the pages were clean.
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