![]() ![]() ![]() This offered the story spontaneity and a warm feeling. Although the first volume was a story about grief and death, it was also about living, and it was filled with funny little moments and conversations between Holly’s family and friends that sparkled in the story like a precious yet familiar gemstone. The humour that was present in the first book seems to have disappeared in Postscript. It is a difficult task she has to do and yet Holly finds herself drawn to it, almost like under a spell. That being said, the PS I Love You Club takes her right back, at the time when her wound was the most raw and sore, not healed yet – just after Gerry passed. As she thought in PS I Love You, she had to live in order to move on. ![]() ![]() Her life, surprising or not, did move on after Gerry’s death. At the beginning of the sequel, we find a changed Holly, a person changed from her experience with grief, a person fully grown due to her pain. The sequel to the much-loved PS I Love You by Cecelia Ahern, Postscript is all about post-events following the raw and painful wound in Holly’s heart caused by her husband’s death. Postscript is a book that fits its title entirely. Top Tip: Reading PS I Love You first is essential Writing is captivating so allocate longer periods of time for reading. Key Words: grief, self-development, love, death, familyīest read: anytime, although be warned that it contains some sensitive, emotional topics such as terminal illness and death. ![]()
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