Remembering Didion’s The White Album

Maddie Oatman bio ↓  ·  January 21st, 2010  ·  filed under books

Thirty years have passed since Joan Didion composed The White Album, her book of essays about the unsettling thrills and shadows of 1970’s LA, and by now the book’s title might as well refer to the hair color of its many personalities.  Didion herself is seventy-five, and the era she wrote about has been eclipsed by the roaring nineties and disaster crazed ‘aughts.

But much of her insight remains relevant, writes Josh-Garrett Davis. In his essay “California Über Alles” written for The Faster Times, he deems The White Album “almost a book of Genesis for the period of American history” he’s lived through. As Garrett-Davis reflects on his own bildungsroman in California, he comes to see Didion’s book as the creation story of a post-60’s world, a world fraught with uncertainty, detachment, and moral ambiguity.

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Maddie Oatman has interviewed musicians, photographers, and writers for The Rumpus. She is currently an editorial intern and fact-checker at Mother Jones magazine. You can follow her on Twitter or check out her musings on everything from miso-glazed morning buns to vegan Mexican food on her blog, Oats. More from this author →

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