Reviews tagging 'Gaslighting'

A Book of Common Prayer by Joan Didion

1 review

emilycm's review

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challenging dark emotional mysterious reflective sad medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.5

"i understood what warren bogart could do to charlotte douglas because i met him later, once in new orleans: he had the look of a man who could drive a woman like charlotte right off her head. i have no idea what i mean by "a woman like charlotte." i suppose i mean a woman so convinced of the danger that lies in the backward glance. i might have said a woman so unstable, but i told you, charlotte performed the tracheotomy, charlotte dropped the clinic apron at the colonel's feet. i am less and less convinced that the word "unstable" has any useful meaning except insofar as it describes a chemical compound."

solid 4.5 stars from me. don't know if i have anything in my heart to rate a didion work lower (sorry, does that make me insufferable and pretentious, yes but i don't care!). this definitely jumped on my list of favorite didion works, especially since i am still getting through exploring her novels. i would say this is a more complex (if that's even possible) play it as it lays, with a rich mixture of what makes didion so brilliant, that is her reporting style of writing.

at least 20 pages in, i was unsure if i was going to click with this. with didion's voice of clarity and authority ringing through the writing, almost like she was narrating it in my internal monologue, i was finally truly gripped when it reached the point of dialogue. the description of these characters comes through in their dialogue. charlotte is defined by her own set of dialogue outside of grace's observations and characterization of her. but even then, as typical with didion's writing, the dialogue can be vague and can be convoluted so as we are to understand that there are double meanings, and perhaps what is being said is not always what is meant or what was actually said. 

it's what i love most about her novel writing. the female protagonists are wallowing in this desolate state, and there is yet something alluring about them. she never quite carves out their image. leaves it ever so unfinished that you're left with the last lines of the book wondering about the charlottes out there right now.

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