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Joan Didion in three books

2021-12-24T04:01:45.862Z


The great American chronicler was slow to be translated into Spanish, but was enthusiastically received by readers


Although it was her mother who gave her a notebook and told her to write, her career started at

Vogue

magazine

, where the then young and talented budding writer from the US West Coast landed thanks to a contest she entered. with an article-essay.

That one of the best prose writers in the English language and one of the journalists who revolutionized the way of seeing and telling was forged in the writing of a classic women's magazine is not a trivial fact.

Joan Didion, who, she said, spent many hours copying Hemingway's novels on her typewriter to understand the rhythm of his prose, learned, by writing

Vogue

captions

,

the power of synthesis, and that lesson carried her to its ultimate consequences.

Its elegance is equally legendary.

More information

American writer Joan Didion dies at 87

You could say that Didion is the Susan Sontag of the West Coast, but in a way that would be unfair to these two Californians. What is certain is that both were revered and admired, only that one achieved international fame very soon and the other did not succeed with Spanish readers until the 21st century, with the book she wrote after the death of her husband and which originally published the now defunct Global Rythm Press label. At that point, Didion had already written some of the key texts to understand the United States and the transformation that was taking place, and also to understand her, her fragility, her doubts and the strength of her narratives. Didion writes about his headaches and leaves you speechless, about his farewell to New York and moves you even if you don't know the city, and about

hippies

from San Francisco and manages to find that little girl high on acid who realizes what was happening.

In the documentary that her nephew, the actor Griffin Dunne, made about her when the writer was 86 years old

(The Center Will Not Hold) she

opens those tiny, slanted eyes and clenches her hands with enthusiasm when she remembers that grotesque scene with the girl of the

hippies:

"That was gold!"

'The year of magical thinking'

One night, in her Manhattan apartment in 2003, back from the hospital where her daughter Quintana was admitted with a serious infection, her husband, also the writer John Gregory Dunne, collapsed while they were having dinner. A companion and main enthusiast of Didion's work, his mainstay for decades, together they grew up, wrote, traveled and encouraged each other. Didion began writing about the brutal loss in October 2004 and finished the book on New Years Eve.

The year of magical thinking

It was his first non-fiction work, in which he did not collect essays and reports, but rather insisted on dissecting his grief in such a cerebral and controlled way that it multiplied the shock that his story contained.

Exquisite and always elegant, intelligence and pain were guessed behind each of the sentences in which Didion fought to avoid sentimentality and tried to understand what was happening.

This book, a landmark in the literature of loss, was brought to the theater by Vanessa Redgrave and made Didion a star.

It was Didion's first book translated into Spanish to be successful and made known to readers.

The continuation was

Blue Nights

, which he dedicated to his daughter, who died a few months after Dunne.

Joan Didion and her husband, the writer John Dunne, in 1977.AP

'As the game comes on'

Didion's first novel was published in 1970 and was set in Hollywood. Today is a classic of American literature, read in

colleges

of universities as great feminist work, accurate portrait of an era, the same as on the other coast was reflected, for example, in the film

Ice Storm,

by director Ang Lee, although in this novel there is no snow, but palm trees and decadent seventies glamor. At the center is an actress whose career hasn't quite taken off, overshadowed by her husband's directorial fame. He was the one who decided to admit his daughter to a center for children with special needs and he was the one who decided about the new pregnancy. Direct and forceful, this story speaks of the emptiness of lives overturned in appearances, the falsehood that hides a supposed freedom and the difficulty of being a woman in a world that revolves around men. His next novel,

A Common Liturgy

He left seven years later and once again has the woman at the center, although in this case they are two Americans in an invented Central American state that bears a certain resemblance to Nicaragua.

As a chronicler, Didion also traveled to Central America, to El Salvador, to write a series of articles that he published in

The New York Review of Books

and that ended up forming a bleak, accurate and brutal book.

'Those who dream the American dream'

This anthology of Didion's best journalistic and personal essays only exists in Spanish.

The editor Claudio López Lamadrid convinced the author to compile a new selection that would include texts that had appeared in other books and anthologies of hers such as

The White Album, Miami, Salvador

or

Slouching Towards Bethlehem.

The result is a brilliant

anthology, a Didion distillate that allows one to get closer to one of the surgeons who with the most dedication and talent has known how to dissect and portray the American reality of the last half century.

What has America been?

Nobody better than Didion to respond with that look that combines closeness and distance in the same sentence.

Source: elparis

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