![]() The way out may not be fast, it will be painful, and will strain your relationships with your surviving loved ones, but it is possible. I was genuinely afraid that the plot would turn into someone spiraling into drug addiction after the loss of a loved one (my heart wasn’t ready for that), but instead, The Two Lives of Lydia Bird is a painfully honest but still hopeful look at love and loss – the pain, denial, and anger of it all, but still managing to find your way out. There’s no sugarcoating the pain of losing the love of your life, but Josie Silver takes you through Lydia’s grieving process with empathy and understanding. ![]() ![]() Now Lydia has to make a choice: stay in her dreamworld with Freddie, or figure out her new life without him. But real life goes on, whether she is asleep or awake. ![]() Then the pills don’t just help her sleep: they take her to a world where Freddie lives. ![]() Lost and grieving, she starts taking experimental pills to help her sleep. But Lydia’s world turns upside down when Freddie dies on her 28th birthday because of a car accident. It’s been this way since Lydia Bird and Freddie Hunter were fourteen years old. ![]()
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