taylorlorenz:

The Autumn of Joan Didion - Magazine - The Atlantic - via The Awl

Women who encountered Joan Didion when they were young received from her  a way of being female and being writers that no one else could give  them. She was our Hunter Thompson, and Slouching Towards Bethlehem was our Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas.  He gave the boys twisted pig-fuckers and quarts of tequila; she gave us  quiet days in Malibu and flowers in our hair. “We were somewhere around  Barstow on the edge of the desert when the drugs began to take hold,”  Thompson wrote. “All I ever did to that apartment was hang fifty yards  of yellow theatrical silk across the bedroom windows, because I had some  idea that the gold light would make me feel better,” Didion wrote. To  not understand the way that those two statements would reverberate in  the minds of, respectively, young men and young women is to not know  very much at all about those types of creatures. Thompson’s work was  illustrated by Ralph Steadman’s grotesque ink blots, and early Didion by  the ravishing photographs of the mysterious girl-woman: sitting  barelegged on a stone balustrade; posing behind the wheel of her yellow  Corvette; wearing an elegant silk gown and staring off into space, all  alone in a chic living room.


“She never took her purse off her lap!” my mother said afterward of that night, gobsmacked. “She took it to the dinner table!”

taylorlorenz:

The Autumn of Joan Didion - Magazine - The Atlantic - via The Awl

Women who encountered Joan Didion when they were young received from her a way of being female and being writers that no one else could give them. She was our Hunter Thompson, and Slouching Towards Bethlehem was our Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas. He gave the boys twisted pig-fuckers and quarts of tequila; she gave us quiet days in Malibu and flowers in our hair. “We were somewhere around Barstow on the edge of the desert when the drugs began to take hold,” Thompson wrote. “All I ever did to that apartment was hang fifty yards of yellow theatrical silk across the bedroom windows, because I had some idea that the gold light would make me feel better,” Didion wrote. To not understand the way that those two statements would reverberate in the minds of, respectively, young men and young women is to not know very much at all about those types of creatures. Thompson’s work was illustrated by Ralph Steadman’s grotesque ink blots, and early Didion by the ravishing photographs of the mysterious girl-woman: sitting barelegged on a stone balustrade; posing behind the wheel of her yellow Corvette; wearing an elegant silk gown and staring off into space, all alone in a chic living room.

“She never took her purse off her lap!” my mother said afterward of that night, gobsmacked. “She took it to the dinner table!”

Notes

  1. rockinrobin3 reblogged this from taylorlorenz and added:
    I don’t care what it is about or who it is I’m in love with that lady face. I’m really starting to realize that...
  2. shebs reblogged this from peterwknox
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  5. thanksforsharing reblogged this from taylorlorenz and added:
    “She never took her purse off her lap!” my mother said afterward of that night, gobsmacked. “She took it to the dinner...
  6. taylorlorenz reblogged this from peterwknox
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