4.12 AVERAGE


loved didion’s writing but wished i cared more about LA! favourite essays include ‘slouching towards bethlehem’, ‘on keeping a notebook’, ‘on self-respect’, ‘on going home’ and ‘goodbye to all that’. enjoyed the personal essays most and wish it had more of those.

Didion is more interesting when covering a topic than her own life. The title essay put a whole new light on Haight-Ashbury: more Trainspotting than Summer of Love.

I can't believe she wrote these when she was in her 20s and early 30s. Didion makes me not want to stop reading about topics I wouldn't otherwise care about (hippies in San Francisco, a housewife who killed her husband for the insurance money, John Wayne and other old Hollywood stars). I do prefer the more personal essays (on keeping a notebook and the one where she talks about her life in New York were my favorites) but the whole collection is great.

Oh, and I found this gem which she wrote when she was my age: "I have already lost touch with a couple of people I used to be".
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One thing about Joan Didion is she will shove California down your throat. This is something that shapes her writing and is simply a fact of her style – if you already find this annoying, perhaps her works will not agree with you.

I, for one, got tired of it around the last 50 pages of this essay collection. This selection has 3 parts, with the second being her Personals, and while it was not a let down ... I think I expected more out of it. Notably, ON SELF-RESPECT is something I would consider a standout, but not by any great margin. I do think that one essay alone is something worth looking up and giving up 5 minutes of your time to read, however.

Truthfully, this did not endear me to Didion's work — but it did not drive me away either. I think Didion writes for a specific audience and unfortunately, I do not always fall under that category, but I believe nonfiction works are necessary to read regardless, one cannot be a well-rounded thinker without immersing themselves in the realities of the world – even though they may not be realities that we can readily relate ourselves to.

With that said, I hope to tackle Didion's other selection of essays later this year, The White Album. Here's to hoping I like it just a tiny bit more.
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this was pretty awesome. i really like how precise joan didion is with her writing. also, it’s so american. in a good way. she talks a lot about california and new york and just idiosyncrasies of the east and the west that are really interesting to me as someone who has only ever lived in the east. i think i’ll need to read more of didion. she’s someone i’d like to take writing inspiration from. 
my favorites were “where the kissing never stops,” “slouching towards bethlehem,” and “on keeping a notebook.” definitely that one. 
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