Blue Nights - Joan Didion

Blue Nights

By Joan Didion

  • Release Date: 2011-11-01
  • Genre: Biographies & Memoirs
Score: 4
4
From 417 Ratings

Description

NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • A work of stunning frankness about losing a daughter, from the bestselling, award-winning author of The Year of Magical Thinking and Let Me Tell You What I Mean

Richly textured with memories from her own childhood and married life with her husband, John Gregory Dunne, and daughter, Quintana Roo, this new book by Joan Didion is an intensely personal and moving account of her thoughts, fears, and doubts regarding having children, illness and growing old.

As she reflects on her daughter’s life and on her role as a parent, Didion grapples with the candid questions that all parents face, and contemplates her age, something she finds hard to acknowledge, much less accept. Blue Nights—the long, light evening hours that signal the summer solstice, “the opposite of the dying of the brightness, but also its warning”—like The Year of Magical Thinking before it, is an iconic book of incisive and electric honesty, haunting and profound.


Reviews

  • Blue nights

    4
    By Basblu
    Lovely. Beautifully written. Moving. Sad. Lovely.
  • Real aging

    4
    By Docjpv1
    Affecting and moving. Frustrating sometimes, as listening to an older person tell THEIR story can be. Soak this in. She is not writing to entertain, but to do her best to tell something real.
  • Too sad

    1
    By Reality 1
    I think Joan needs help to deal with her grief. My heart breaks for her, but her books are sounding the same now.
  • Not The Year of Magical Thinking

    2
    By Brentoinla
    Isn't it time that Didion stop profiting from the death of loved ones? TYOMT took us on a raw and emotional journey. It was a beautiful and heartbroken prose; this book isn't. Instead, I found it to be a boring tale of her privileged life and her glimpses of motherhood. It's tangential, unorganized, and flat. It's certainly not the tribute I'd want from my mother. Perhaps she should put down the pen. It was a disappointing read.
  • Blue Nights

    2
    By Blue Nights
    Ms. Didion's tale of life, death, and grief throughout are depicted as an experience unique to the author. While nearly 30 years her junior, I endured many similar life experiences commencing at age five. My parents were not Hollywood producers, they were milk producers (dairy farmers.). My mother likely never heard of designer labels, instead she manufactured many of her own wears. And those that were well known in the community of both good and ill repute we're not mob bosses and entertainers, but rather local clergy and county folk. All who are born are destined in one fashion or another to share the experience of life, and ultimately death. Didion's latest memoir is testament to the fact that neither notoriety or riches entitles any of us to exemption. Frankly, very little of what she writes about here is unknown to any of us, sad as it may seem.
  • Sometimes moving

    3
    By USJackDempsey
    There were times, reading this, that I felt strongly moved by JD's repetitive sentence structures, a technique she more or less perfected in "The Book of Common Prayer.". At other times, I felt her prose style had become no longer mannered--something I loved in her work--but rather an echo of what it had been, her incantations victories not of feeling but only of syntax. I felt sorry, of course, for her losses--but I got fed up at times with the sense of privilege that saturated her recent writing. Terrible things happen without notice? Doctors are uninterested in patients? For these to be discoveries--well, you'd have to be white and rather privileged not to have learned these things by 35. Do I sound churlish? I don't mean to be. But it pains me to see one of my favorite writers succumb to the myth of herself.
  • Blue Nights

    1
    By HellomaryLou
    Disappointing, after reading her great "The Year of Magical Thinking", this was so sad to read. Her physical and emotional decline are so evident in her writing. This is a woman who has lost everything of importance and now must face the loss of her health as we all must if we live long enough to be old.
  • Disappointed

    1
    By AppCrashing
    I actually didn't like this book very much, and had to stop reading about 80 pages in. I have no doubt there is profound soul-searching here, which is why I bought it in the first place. But I felt that sincerity obscured by the frequent name dropping and elitist references - things like, "so-and-so made this movie and while on his yacht in the Maldives he took a picture of my daughter in her designer dress while I made martinis in my Chanel suit.". I understand the importance of life context, but I just felt the repetitive overlay of references to their fabulous life made me somewhat unsympathetic. For another grappling with the fatal illness of a loved one, I'd recommend Terry Tempest Williams' Refuge.
  • Interesting

    4
    By sandy526
    I read the excerpt from this book and thought it would be an interesting read from an interesting lady, being unfamiliar with Joan Didion. I did enjoy the book, which I read in one fell swoop. I cannot imagine her loss or pain, but I found that her anguish and pain and possibly her healing came through well in her book. I liked the style of writing also but came away looking for more details, which just aren't there. I will read more of her books in the future.