HomeNewsTrendsFeaturesRemembrance: How Joan Didion's prose helped me through the lockdowns

Remembrance: How Joan Didion's prose helped me through the lockdowns

Joan Didion's politics were far removed from the sometimes transactional nature of reporting. She observed silently, immersed herself in the environment.

January 09, 2022 / 21:15 IST
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Joan Didion was a pioneer of New Journalism.
Joan Didion was a pioneer of New Journalism.

At the start of 2021, I learnt that Joan Didion's uncollected works, mostly journalistic pieces from the 1960s and '70s, would be published in a volume Let Me Tell You What I Mean. I was overjoyed, and pre-ordered the book.

When the book arrived, like always, I was enamoured by her prose—her reflective storytelling and eclectic sentences—and felt enriched reading each of its 12 essays.

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Joan Didion passed away months later, on December 23, 2021, at her home in Manhattan. She had been suffering from Parkinson’s disease for a long time. She was 87. ***

When the pandemic broke out and the world was locked down, days and nights appeared the same, as if time had stopped—a similar gloom that paralysed Didion when she lost her husband, also a writer and screenwriter, John Gregory Dunne, on December 30, 2003. In Didion’s well-crafted and fully formulated sentences, which explained every inexplicable thing to me, escape appeared easy.

Her sentences stood testament to the fact that this California-born writer never wrote anything without involving herself in the story. It was as if she were owning up: I am responsible for writing this. Like she was bearing witness, recording something. Thus, in more ways than one, her writerly ethos questioned the positionalities, of herself and that of her reader(s).