"There's a guy. He was hit by a truck." On a rainy November day, Mia Hayes' husband left for work on his Vespa. Normally, she would have driven him, but Mia was waiting on a phone call with an editor and didn't have time. She never saw that caring, loving version of her husband again. The fallout from his accident--Mia's guilt and her husband's PTSD, memory loss, and depression--consumed their lives over the next five years as her laid-back husband changed into an angry man with few memories of their past. Desperate to hold her fragile family together, Mia ignored her own unraveling and plunged into bipolar depression. As she searched for answers to unanswerable questions, Mia moved her family from San Francisco to Paris, France before landing in a leafy Washington, D.C. suburb where she tried to find a fresh start only to become embroiled in a scandal of her own making. Through ups and downs, mental illness and bad decisions, Mia struggled with what it means to be a good wife and mother, whether saving her marriage was worth the pain, and understanding that healing is a personal journey. Always Yours, Bee is a heartbreaking yet triumphant and brave look at a woman, a marriage, and a family falling apart and coming out stronger. Told with clarity and introspection, it captures the terror of losing the person closest to you—yourself.
No posts yet
Kick off the convo with a theory, question, musing, or update
Your rating:
My answer would be this book, based on the life events of Mia Hayes. I cried ugly tears, I rallied behind Mia & her family, and I ultimately felt closer to her after she shared her story. It is a rare thing sometimes to really connect with the author on such a deep, emotional level.
If you are like me, and yearn for a book to pull all the gut-wrenching emotions out of your body when you read, this is definitely a book for you. It’s a honest & open look at loss, betrayal, depression, and just how hard we are on ourselves to be the perfect wife, mother, human.