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To dwell in Los Angeles is to dwell in Joan Didion’s world. On what would have been the author’s 91st birthday, Didion’s thorny and tangled imaginative and prescient of town endures. A thinker, historian, songbird of grief and prophet, Didion foretold town’s future with startling accuracy.
Of writing, Didion as soon as mentioned, “I’m totally in control of this tiny, tiny world right there at the typewriter.” The identical could be mentioned of Los Angeles — a universe she continues to relate to us lengthy after her loss of life.
“Los Angeles weather is the weather of catastrophe, of apocalypse,” Didion wrote. In January 2025, when fires ravaged neighborhoods throughout the area, her former residence of Malibu was once more bathed in ash. On social media, the late author’s phrases went viral for his or her startling poignancy. “Horses caught fire and were shot on the beach, birds exploded in the air,” she wrote in “Quiet Days in Malibu.” Of the Santa Ana winds — “devil winds,” as she known as them — she warned, “The city burning is Los Angeles’s deepest image of itself.” As components of town smoldered, many turned to Didion’s aching, poetic rendering of a paradise misplaced. And because the metropolis rebuilt, she reminded readers of the resilient, pioneering spirit inherent to California and its folks: “In California we did not believe that history could bloody the land, or even touch it,” she wrote in “Where I Was From.” For a lot of, these phrases rang out as an affirmation — even a prayer.
“There is no real way to deal with everything we lose,” she noticed in “The Year of Magical Thinking.” Her writing, shrouded in grief, took on a brand new sharpness in post-fire Los Angeles.
The town continues to dwell in each the wreckage and the knowledge of Didion’s work. This 12 months, a sequence of reportedly violent ICE raids unsettled Los Angeles, drawing nationwide consideration to immigration formed by political violence overseas. These strains echo a longstanding preoccupation in Didion’s reporting on Latin America. In her indicting ebook “Salvador,” she describes the political terror that engulfed El Salvador in 1982 and examines how U.S. intervention exacerbated it. In her nonfiction ebook “Miami,” Didion chronicles the world of Cuban exiles, portraying a conflict-ridden group with grace and her trademark readability. Her fascination with Latin America loomed giant in her reporting. The results of Didion’s critiques of neoliberalism and American intervention stay forward of their time, taking part in out immediately on the streets of Los Angeles, the place immigrants are detained by federal brokers — propelled by the insurance policies and hypocrisies Didion as soon as uncovered.
As town faces unparalleled challenges, we are able to relaxation assured that Joan Didion might be with us every step of the best way. For the author’s 91st birthday, six writers with work printed on Didion spoke on the author’s legacy from their favourite Didion anecdote to her work that also resonates a long time later.
Lili Anolik
What’s an anecdote about Joan Didion that resonates with you?
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It’s 1967, one 12 months earlier than “Slouching Towards Bethlehem” is printed, so one 12 months earlier than Joan Didion is Joan Didion. Joan and [husband] John [Gregory Dunne] are each writing for the Saturday Night Submit, and making fairly good cash. They get cocky, purchase a brand new automobile — a Corvette Stingray, banana yellow. They’ve simply pushed it residence, after which they hear a rumor that the Saturday Night Submit is folding. John begins to sweat. He says, “Oh, God, maybe we should take back the car.” Joan seems to be at him and says, “Don’t think poor.”
What’s your favourite piece of Joan Didion writing?
My favourite piece of Joan Didion writing is the opener to “Slouching Towards Bethlehem,” “Some Dreamers of the Golden Dream.” It’s trashy noir but elevated and completely dead-eyed — as if Flannery O’Connor took a crack at writing a James M. Cain story.
“Didion & Babitz” (Scribner)
Hilton Als
What’s an anecdote about Joan Didion that resonates with you?
I don’t have a favourite anecdote about Joan; her affect and love is of a chunk. However what I adored most was making her chortle.
What’s your favourite piece of Joan Didion writing?
The extra I learn Joan, the extra I perceive that with out realizing it, maybe, she was a thinker of types — largely in regards to the American arrival delusion, and what that dream seems to be like, or doesn’t appear like. It’s onerous to extrapolate one ebook or piece from that monumental physique of labor, however generally I dream of the colours and ideal form and concepts she put forth in “A Book of Common Prayer,” which strikes me as a feminist textual content, in the end, starting with the primary line: “I will be her witness.” How marvelous for a feminine narrator to say that about one other lady.
“Joan Didion: What She Means” (Delmonico Books)
David Ulin
What’s an anecdote about Joan Didion that resonates with you?
After I was 18 and residing in San Francisco, I first learn her. I learn “Slouching Towards Bethlehem” after which “The White Album.” The complicated, even doom-stricken bleakness of her viewpoint actually resonated with me. I are inclined to share that viewpoint by way of my desirous about the world and humanity. It echoed for me, a dimension I used to be sensing whereas residing in California for the primary time that I hadn’t actually seen wherever else. I subsequently noticed it in numerous different writers, however she was actually the primary who taught me that California was a fancy, sophisticated, multivaried panorama — a spot with numerous contradictory historical past.
What’s your favourite piece of Joan Didion writing?
There’s a chunk known as “On the Morning After the Sixties,” which ends with this lovely line: “If I could believe that going to a barricade would affect man’s fate in the slightest, I would go to that barricade.” That essay particularly ought to be higher identified as a result of the writing is so lovely and her sensibility so sharp and contrarian. It’s very transient; it’s an impression, nearly like a sketch. I really like that type of writing normally. She was a author who taught me that I might write in lengthy type and in brief type, with the shape dictated by the content material. “On the Morning After the Sixties” is a stupendous encapsulation of her aesthetic and viewpoint in a really transient format.
“Joan Didion: The 1980s & 90s” (Library of America)
Evelyn McDonnell
What’s an anecdote about Joan Didion that resonates with you?
Joan Didion went to Sacramento Metropolis Faculty for a short time. As she wrote, she solely utilized to Stanford. She was simply capturing for the celebrities. And as everyone knows, you’re presupposed to have your first alternative, your medium alternative, after which your backup. It was a mix of conceitedness and naivete. Her dad and mom weren’t directing her appropriately about how you can apply for school, so she put all her eggs in a single basket — and that basket denied her. That was a lesson in humility for Didion, and he or she took it very onerous. She truly mentioned she thought she would kill herself, which additionally demonstrates her tendency to dramatize. She had initially wished to be an actor. Later, she took the rejection as a lesson and pinned the letter to her wall, the place she saved it for a few years. Then she utilized to Berkeley and was accepted. It was too late to start out within the fall, so she accomplished a summer season and a semester at Sacramento Metropolis Faculty, which was truly good for her as a result of it related her to Sacramento as an grownup, not simply as a baby. Later in life, when she talked about her Sacramento roots — the river events, the beer events, and her boyfriend Bob — a lot of that got here from the time she spent there.
What’s your favourite piece of Joan Didion writing?
“Why I Write” resonates with me as a result of her causes for writing are similar to my very own. It felt validating. She wrote as a way to determine what she thought. The method of placing phrases on the web page helped her perceive herself and the world. As a author, I fully relate to that. I inform my college students to not use AI — there’s something about that course of, about formulating one’s ideas by writing them, that’s important. I believe a lot of her resonance comes from the best way she was educational in her writing. She gave many speeches that at the moment are a part of her lore. Though she was by no means formally a trainer, I really feel she was a trainer to many people and a mentor to numerous writers.
“The World According to Joan Didion” (HarperOne)
Cory Leadbeater
What’s an anecdote about Joan Didion that resonates with you?
A few of the most clever and proficient folks would come to dinner along with her and spend hours arguing their case about some present occasion or author or movie or no matter, and Joan would sit in silence your entire time. Ultimately, somebody would get round to asking Joan, “Well, what do you think?” And Joan would set free a protracted exhale via her nostril, after which say very quietly, “I don’t know.”
What’s your favourite piece of Joan Didion writing?
My favourite piece she ever wrote is a small essay in “The White Album” known as “At the Dam.” It’s about visiting the Hoover Dam. It’s not a chunk I usually see mentioned when folks discuss her monumental and overwhelming physique of labor. If you wish to perceive her worldview and the feeble makes an attempt human beings make to convey order to a chaotic universe, that essay is the most effective place to start out. It focuses on the huge effort to rein in nature and convey the works of humankind to bear on a panorama that’s fully detached to us. Within the essay, she displays on her personal smallness, the smallness of humankind, and our collective efforts to create one thing lasting or significant. It ends along with her desirous about the Hoover Dam after humanity is gone. It’s a quintessential Joan Didion picture: She imagines the day after the human race is gone, capturing each apocalyptic self-annihilation and surprise on the super efforts we make to do one thing significant with our time. On a craft degree, that final sentence — “transmitting power and releasing water to a world where no one is” — reveals her on the peak of her inventive powers.
“The Uptown Local” (Ecco)
Steffie Nelson
What’s an anecdote about Joan Didion that resonates with you?
I really like the story Didion tells of going to Ralphs in a bikini on a 105-degree day. It’s simply such a humorous picture to me. To think about this lady all of us revere — it’s unattainable to think about her doing it. It appears so out of character. But she did it along with her reserved manner of talking and her buttoned-up method. The lady who confronted her was fully outraged, banging her procuring cart into her and saying, “What a what a thing to wear to Ralphs.” I really like that picture as a result of it reveals an individual who might at all times shock everybody. To me, Didion stays stuffed with shock.
What’s your favourite piece of Joan Didion writing?
My favourite piece continues to be the primary piece of hers that I ever learn: “Some Dreamers of the Golden Dream,” which is the opening essay of “Slouching Towards Bethlehem.” It’s not simply the story of the assassin, Lucille Miller, who burned her husband alive, that I discover so compelling. However it’s the idea of the golden dream and the promise of California, which has taken on a lifetime of its personal in my mind. It continues morphing as our cultural beliefs change, and I truly interpret the golden dream in a different way than Didion presents it. Her definition contains the inevitable fall and the final word disappointment once you attain for this golden dream. However I consider the efficiency of the golden dream is within the aspiration and the want for one thing larger. This envisioning and reaching is an expertise of the golden dream that all of us can have, versus one thing that no one can ever have.
“Slouching Towards Los Angeles: Living and Writing by Joan Didion’s Light” (Uncommon Chicken Books)
Connors is a author residing in Los Angeles. She hosts the literary studying “Unreliable Narrators” at Nico’s Wine each month.

