The White Album
Books | Biography & Autobiography / Personal Memoirs
4.2
(434)
Joan Didion
An extraordinary report on the aftermath of the 1960s in America by the New York Times–bestselling author of South and West and Slouching Towards Bethlehem. In this landmark essay collection, Joan Didion brilliantly interweaves her own “bad dreams” with those of a nation confronting the dark underside of 1960s counterculture. From a jailhouse visit to Black Panther Party cofounder Huey Newton to witnessing First Lady of California Nancy Reagan pretend to pick flowers for the benefit of news cameras, Didion captures the paranoia and absurdity of the era with her signature blend of irony and insight. She takes readers to the “giddily splendid” Getty Museum in Los Angeles, the cool mountains of Bogotá, and the Jordanian Desert, where Bishop James Pike went to walk in Jesus’s footsteps—and died not far from his rented Ford Cortina. She anatomizes the culture of shopping malls—“toy garden cities in which no one lives but everyone consumes”—and exposes the contradictions and compromises of the women’s movement. In the iconic title essay, she documents her uneasy state of mind during the years leading up to and following the Manson murders—a terrifying crime that, in her memory, surprised no one. Written in “a voice like no other in contemporary journalism,” The White Album is a masterpiece of literary reportage and a fearless work of autobiography by the National Book Award–winning author of The Year of Magical Thinking (The New York Times Book Review). Its power to electrify and inform remains undiminished nearly forty years after it was first published.
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More Details:
Author
Joan Didion
Pages
224
Publisher
Open Road Media
Published Date
2017-05-09
ISBN
1504045661 9781504045667
Ratings
Google: 5
Community ReviewsSee all
"Joan Didion might be my favorite author. Some of these essays were a little boring to me but most of them were really good. And some of them were amazing. Like amazing. "
L G
Lexi Gregory
"Her prose will never be matched. "
T M
Tate Montgomery
"I liked her style and use of language but found the subjects not so interesting (The Doors chapter was the most interesting, if predictable). She is very articulate and evocative but comes across a bit detached and kind of floating through life. She is writing about a period that I have very little knowledge about which didn't help."