Joan Didion is one of America's most respected writers, her work constituting some of the greatest portraits of modern-day American culture. Over the four decades of her career, she has produced widely-acclaimed journalistic essays, personal essays, novels, non-fiction, memoir and screenplays. Her memoir The Year of Magical Thinking won the National Book Award in 2005.
`Didion at her most fascinatingly unfiltered, recording folksy vernacular at a motel pool, having G & Ts with Walker Percy, and searching fruitlessly for Faulkner's grave in an Oxford cemetery ... her riffs on everything from Gertrude Atherton to crossing the Golden Gate bridge for the first time in three-inch heels captures the thrill of a writer discovering her richest subject: the American mythologies that governed her own romantic girlhood, a yearning for an MGM-style heritage that never really was - a yearning that feels freshly perilous in its delusions.' Vogue `Let your heart skip a beat. For here be new writing from the mind behind The Year of Magical Thinking and The White Album - Joan Didion. But this isn't just for Didionites. `Notes On The South' is a time-travelling piece of fascination. For an understanding of certain parts of modern America, it still has eerie resonance ... An insight into the process of a writer who can truly be referred to as an icon' Emerald Street `A compelling book - rooted utterly in a past now all but lost to us, while also incredibly timely and relevant ... It bears the hallmarks of Didion's sparkling prose' Los Angeles Review of Books `You'll learn more about America's future from Didion's 40-year-old field notes than you will from tomorrow's newspaper' Esquire `There's a universal rule against reading someone else's diary - but in this case, it's not just OK, it's required reading' Marie Claire `The power of Didion's work is on striking display in this slender volume ... Didion's notes are remarkably polished and slicing; they shimmer with dark implications' Booklist `Here are many of the splendid, sharp-eyed sentences for which [Didion] has long been admired ... An almost spectral text haunted by a past that never seems distant' Kirkus Reviews