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Joan Didion's Literary Influences's Reading List

Notable reader profiled on radicalreads.com. 25 favorite books recommended in their radicalreads feature.

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Favorite books (2021)

Favorite books recommended by Joan Didion's Literary Influences, as compiled by radicalreads.com. Source article: https://radicalreads.com/joan-didion-favorite-books/.

Source: radicalreads.com

any inherent virtue, but because they illustrate something deep in the grain, something unadmitted.” We’re not interested in Howard Hughes simply for his money or power, she argues, but for his personal freedom. · Buy on Amazon
the imposition of a narrative line upon disparate images, by the ‘ideas’ with which we have learned to freeze the shifting phantasmagoria which is our actual experience.” · Buy on Amazon
Cover of Speedboat
Renata Adler · Buy on Amazon
Cover of Collected Poems
Joseph Conrad (also rec’d by Bob Dylan ) · Buy on Amazon
Fyodor Dostoyevsky (also rec’d by David Lynch , Joan Didion , Norman Mailer & Philip Roth ) · Buy on Amazon
George Eliot · Buy on Amazon
"Something about George Eliot attracted me a great deal."
Ford Madox Ford · Buy on Amazon
Christopher Isherwood · Buy on Amazon
Henry James · Buy on Amazon
"He wrote perfect sentences, too, but very indirect, very complicated. Sentences with sinkholes. You could drown in them. I wouldn’t dare to write one. I’m not even sure I’d dare to read James again. I loved those novels so much that I was paralyzed by them for a long time. All those possibilities. All that perfectly reconciled style. It made me afraid to put words down."
James Jones · Buy on Amazon
"The incredible amount of description. When Prewitt tries to get from the part of town where he’s been wounded out to Alma’s house, every street is named. Every street is described. You could take that passage and draw a map of Honolulu."
Robert Lowell · Buy on Amazon
Norman Mailer · Buy on Amazon
"I think no one but Mailer could have dared this book. The authentic Western voice, the voice heard in “The Executioner’s Song,” is one heard often in life but only rarely in literature, the reason being that to truly know the West is to lack all will to write it down. The very subject of “The Executioner’s Song” is that vast emptiness at the center of the Western experience, a nihilism antithetical not only to literature but to most other forms of human endeavor, a dread so close to zero that..."
Gabriel Garcia Márquez · Buy on Amazon
V.S. Naipaul · Buy on Amazon
Joyce Carol Oates · Buy on Amazon
Wallace Stevens · Buy on Amazon

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