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Gretchen Joanna's avatar

I'm a fourth-generation Californian, and have stayed. All of my grandchildren are sixth-generation Californians by birth, but few of them live here now. None of my ancestors came to California from the South, though my paternal grandfather did drive the family of six across the country, camping all the way from upstate New York, in 1925.

Somehow I grew up unselfconsciously Californian, proud of my farmer family and not connected to the big cities at all. And I've never read a Didion book, though when my husband died I almost read Magical Thinking -- until I saw that she was not a woman of faith, so I didn't think that it would be a good fit for me. Just this week I was given her A Book of Common Prayer. I didn't even know about all these California-musing books by her, but you've easily persuaded me to read one of those soon. I'm glad I subscribed to your newsletter just in time for this post!

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David George Moore's avatar

A few years back I read The Year of Magical Thinking. It deals with the death of her husband. It is beautifully written, but like James Baldwin (who I also read the same year), is persistently haunting. Her writing stays with you. I like to say that Didion's writing "stays with you because it slays and fillets you."

In my decades long writing project on trusting God with sudden and overwhelming grief, I mention this Didion book and briefly comment on her hopeless view of life.

Joan Didion's favorite Psalm would definitely be Ps. 88.

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