Play It as It Lays
Books | Fiction / Literary
3.8
(797)
Joan Didion
A harrowing tale of Hollywood, Las Vegas, and a young woman in pursuit of oblivion by the New York Times–bestselling author of The White Album. Spare, elegant, and terrifying, Play It as It Lays is the unforgettable story of a woman and a society come undone. Raised in the ghost town of Silver Wells, Nevada, Maria Wyeth is an ex-model and the star of two films directed by her estranged husband, Carter Lang. But in the spiritual desert of 1960s Los Angeles, Maria has lost the plot of her own life. Her daughter, Kate, was born with an “aberrant chemical in her brain.” Her long-troubled marriage has slipped beyond repair, and her disastrous love affairs and strained friendships provide little comfort. Her only escape is to get in her car and drive the freeway—in the fast lane with the radio turned up high—until it runs out “somewhere no place at all where the flawless burning concrete just stopped.” But every ride to nowhere, every sleepless night numbed by pills and booze and sex, makes it harder for Maria to find the meaning in another day. Told with profound economy of style and a “vision as bleak and precise as Eliot’s in ‘The Wasteland’,” Play It as It Lays ruthlessly dissects the dark heart of the American dream (The New York Times). It is a searing masterpiece “from one of the very few writers of our time who approaches her terrible subject with absolute seriousness, with fear and humility and awe” (Joyce Carol Oates, The New York Times Book Review).
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More Details:
Author
Joan Didion
Pages
240
Publisher
Open Road Media
Published Date
2017-05-09
ISBN
150404567X 9781504045674
Community ReviewsSee all
"Just amazing"
C F
Carolina Figureroa
"Definitely on my top five of all time. Devastatingly raw. "
K K
Katie Kiley Brown
"Bleak, perplexing, and hazy prose. The style of this novel was very disorienting and vague, but I think the implications of her depression are best told this way, like her time blindness, impulsiveness, and social disconnection. It leaves room for interpretation, even though I was a fiend for more context for nearly half the book. D:<br/><br/>To understand the plot and characters better, I was reading chapter analysis's whenever I got confused. I don’t really feel as though it was a depressing read, it was more raw and heavy, but also a quick read and poignant. 4 stars!"
"Dizzying and mildly agitating. It was a short vignette that carried me through a distinctly west coast misery. It recalled all my old ideas of the west coast and how it seemed like a completely different country. So distinct. So exhausting. All the characters served this medicated, disingenuous, and apathetic atmosphere. I wish I read it in the summer."
"Wow. A novel about unbearable loss and anomie, filled with pitiless southwestern light and lost people. it was hard to read and hard to put down. I now understand why this book is famous."
C
CatherineI