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We Tell Ourselves Stories

Joan Didion and the American Dream Machine

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Named one of the Most Anticipated Books of 2025 by the Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, W Magazine, and The Millions, and one of the Best Books of Spring 2025 by Oprah Daily and Town & Country

Named one of the Most Anticipated Books of the month by the New York Times, Town & Country, and the Los Angeles Times.

"Sharp, elegant and eye-opening . . . a crucial toolbox for understanding both Joan Didion and Hollywood." —Emily Nussbaum

Joan Didion opened The White Album (1979) with what would become one of the most iconic lines in American literature: "We tell ourselves stories in order to live." Today, this phrase is deployed inspirationally, printed on T-shirts and posters, used as a battle cry for artists and writers. In truth, Didion was describing something much less rosy: our human tendency to manufacture delusions that might ward away our anxieties when society seems to spin off its axis. Nowhere was this collective hallucination more effectively crafted than in Hollywood.

In this riveting cultural biography, New York Times film critic Alissa Wilkinson examines Joan Didion's influence through the lens of American mythmaking. As a young girl, Didion was infatuated with John Wayne and his on-screen bravado, and was fascinated by her California pioneer ancestry and the infamous Donner Party. The mythos that preoccupied her early years continued to influence her work as a magazine writer and film critic in New York, offering glimmers of the many stories Didion told herself that would come to unravel over the course of her career. But out west, show business beckoned.

We Tell Ourselves Stories eloquently traces Didion's journey from New York to her arrival in Hollywood as a screenwriter at the twilight of the old studio system. She spent much of her adult life deeply embroiled in the glitz and glamor of the Los Angeles elite, where she acutely observed—and denounced—how the nation's fears and dreams were sensationalized on screen. Meanwhile, she paid the bills writing movie scripts like A Star Is Born, while her books propelled her to celestial heights of fame.

Peering through a scrim of celluloid, Wilkinson incisively dissects the cinematic motifs and machinations that informed Didion's writing—and how her writing, ultimately, demonstrated Hollywood's addictive grasp on the American imagination. More than a portrait of a writer, We Tell Ourselves Stories shines a new light on a legacy whose impact will be felt for generations.

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    • Kirkus

      December 15, 2024
      A writer at the movies.New York Times film critic Wilkinson focuses on the connection to movies, celebrity, and Hollywood that shaped Didion's "cool-eyed views of societal collapse, cultural foolishness, personal anxiety, and political strife." Growing up in the 1940s, the young Didion was enamored by movies, especially those featuring a heroic John Wayne. Steeped in a spirit of individualism and western grit, Didion saw in him the stability and strength that she admired. Her connection to movies intensified when she became a film critic, writing forVogue and other venues, and certainly after she and her husband, John Gregory Dunne, moved to Los Angeles to make a career in the film industry. Working on screenplays taught her to write dialogue, and although screenwriting could be frustrating, both she and Dunne found the challenge engrossing and, happily, lucrative. Wilkinson places Didion's novels and essays, from her earliest magazine pieces to her autobiographicalThe Year of Magical Thinking and last essay collections, in the context of a host of movies--Bonnie and Clyde, Easy Rider, Jaws, paranoid thrillers--that honed her perspective on the world and her own writing process. Didion began, she said, "with pictures in her mind," her prose arranged "as you arrange a shot": As a writer, Wilkinson observes, she was "fully a product of Hollywood." Describing Hollywood "as if viewing it through binoculars," she clearly saw how its glitz and glamour "seeped into political campaigning, into media reporting on crime, into how we perceive good, evil, meaning, love, death, and everything else that makes up our lives." The movies taught that "life would follow a genre and an arc," that stories would make narrative sense; reality, Didion reported, is far different. A thoughtful look at a literary star.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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