Book Review: One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel García Márquez
Book Review: The White Album by Joan Didion
Book Description
Book Review: Follow Me by Elizabeth Rose Quinn
Book Description
Book Review: Wired for Story by Lisa Cron
Book Description
Book Review: The Midnight Library by Matt Haig
I wish I had done that.
I wish I hadn’t done that.
These lines are familiar, aren’t they?
They echo in our minds, resounding the regrets from the past – regrets about things that we didn’t do or things we wish we hadn’t done. They can bring us down and hold us back from living our lives.
What if we could return to those moments, make different choices to correct our mistakes, or grab missed opportunities?
Matt Haig explored this idea in his book, The Midnight Library, combined with the themes of existential crisis, depression, hope, acceptance, and courage. Following the story of Nora Seed who had limitless chances to relive her life, Haig courageously articulated the verities of mental health challenges and life itself. He invites the readers to see the beauty of life with its imperfections.
Haig wrote several books with similar themes of mental health, hope, and resilience including How to Stop Time, Reasons to Stay Alive, and The Comfort.
More than 10 million copies sold, The Midnight Library is The Sunday Times and New York Times Bestseller.