Auntie, where are you, think of you ~ - death, eternal silence

In "Condor Heroes", after 16 years, "aunt" and "child" can finally meet.
In "23 Letters to Lottie", the protagonist Lottie and his aunt Helen never see each other.
In "You from the Stars", Although Professor Toshitoshi returns to his home planet, he can still come back to meet Chisang-il.
In "23 Letters to Lottie", Helen chooses not to drink the water of immortality, and the immortal boy Sam and Helen are separated forever.
This article is not easy to match the song single hair "not stained"
Arrangement: Ding Peifeng
Not wanting to be infected is right or wrong, how to predict the opposite of wishes
The flower in the heart withers, and time it can't go back
I hope to wash away the glitz and dust off the dust
Another pot of sake with you, a lifetime of drunkenness
……
(The scene of Liu Yifei's version of Aunt And Huang Xiaoming's version spilling tears and breaking the intestinal cliff and meeting the Valley of Absolute Love came to mind... Speaking of this, I have to mention that Yin Zhiping, the Quanzhen Sect Daoist who defiled his aunt, made me still think of it and hate my aunt.
Writing consists of ninety-nine percent loneliness. Thank you for being with me as I poked my head out of the hole and looked around to see everything I missed.
A person's life is a process of constantly convincing himself to continue living.
Death is something we know when we are conscious, inevitable and unavoidable, but we still can't extricate ourselves when we encounter it.
<h1 class="pgc-h-decimal" data-index="01" > author</h1>
The author is the best-selling American author Katrina Leno, the author of "Molly Pierce's Half Life", "Lost and Found", "Salt Summer" and other works.
The translator of the book is Zhang Huaihai, a doctor of English language and literature at Shanghai Chinese University, who has published books such as "Henry Roth's Study on "Stigmatizing Writing"", as well as "The Will of the Soul", "The Story of the Wolf", "Bartleby the Clerk", "From Canoe to Mars Rover" and many other works.
The author of the book, Caterina Leno, wrote in the first person, with 24 chapters, each chapter followed by excerpts from the works of Aunt Helen, who wrote with the immortal boy Sam as the inspiration for the protagonists of the immortal brothers and sisters Alvin and Margot, such as "Alvin Hart and the House in the Forest", "Alvin Hart and the Man in the Trench coat", "Alvin Hart and the Return of the Man in the Trench coat", "Alvin Hart and the Wasted Machine", "Alvin Hart and the Mysterious Disappearance", "Alvin Hart and the Immortal Society"
<h1 class="pgc-h-decimal" data-index="02" > main content</h1>
From the perspective of the protagonist's niece Lottie, the book is written in reverse order of 23 letters left by Lottie's aunt Helen from the tumor on her breast two months ago to her death.
The prologue is that lottie's family scatters his aunt's ashes to the sea according to his aunt's will, although there is a "comedy" in which Lotty's father accidentally spilled the ashes into his mouth and caused vomiting and gargling more than eight times, and then began a picnic according to his aunt's will, and the food eaten was also the list of food that the aunt had listed in advance, but it still could not cover up the pain and sadness after the loss of relatives hidden behind their laughter...
With the prologue kicked off the memories of two months ago.
The Lottie family went to the downtown lawyer's office to listen to her aunt Helen's will. Aunt Helen is the best-selling author of the Guinness Book of World Records in the children's literature series, so the legacy is rich. She donated half of her estate to designated libraries and charities, and almost all of the rest to the Lottis.
She gave her jewelry, diary and laptop to her niece Lottie separately, and 23 letters were left specifically for Lottie. Aunt Helen and niece Lottie are very important to each other, and she knows that her dearest niece Lottie cannot accept her own death, so she leaves Lottie 23 letters to accompany and say goodbye to her final companions.
<h1 class="pgc-h-decimal" data-index="03" > ended</h1>
Lottie slowly withdrew from the sadness and anxiety of separation, and actively, bravely, and freely faced the future and lived well.