When asked what they knew about Joan Didion, a not insignificant number of people might mention her famous essay “Slouching Towards Bethlehem.” It is the eponymous essay of Didion’s 1968 collection, the first non-fiction collection of her career.
The essay ends with the oft-repeated description of Susan, a five-year-old in the Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco. She wants a bicycle for Christmas, likes ice cream, Coca-Cola, and the beach — and gets high on acid. Didion describes the domestic setup, and her own discomfort: she “falter[s] at the key words” when asking her if she has other friends on drugs. Didion immortalized the scene of Sixties freedom gone wrong; there is no utopia here.
Other Didion fans might be drawn to her essay “Goodbye to All That.” Didion describes the pain and anguish of being “very young” in New York, and writes eloquently about the naivety of youth, which lets you believe that “nothing like this…has ever happened to anyone before.”
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