Life changes fast.
Life changes in the instant.
You sit down and dinner and life as you know it ends.
It was aptly fitting that the book I took with me to the doctor’s today was Joan Didion’s The Year of Magical Thinking. A highly personal and extremely effective memoir about the sudden death of her husband John Dunne and the illness of her daughter Quintana, Didion’s book just won the National Book Award for nonfiction.
It’s a superb read, and it actually calmed me down to the point of thinking it’s the perfect book to have with you when you’re sitting in a hospital waiting room. Didion’s writing style is sometimes hard to follow, she writes long, complex sentences without a lot of punctuation, but that’s because they echo long, complex feelings and issues like grief, death and illness.
Her magical thinking is such a brilliant way of looking at how to cope with the death of a spouse, someone she had been married to for almost 40 years, that it becomes a bit of a trope within the book itself. She can’t give away her husband’s shoes because what would he wear. She doesn’t want to move the last stack of books beside his bed because what will he read when he gets back. When she finds out Julia Child has died, she thinks she and her husband can have dinner, wherever they are.
Yet, there’s another element to the story: her daughter’s illness. It’s another example of magical thinking. Didion’s own mourning and grief over the death of her husband is totally interrupted by her daughter’s terrible illness, and the book moves back and forth over the experiences around these two devastating tragedies that define her life in this period.
It’s not a book of advice, nor is it a self-help book, rather it’s a brilliant examination of the process of grief and mourning. Throughout everything, Didion notes that her own experiences as a writer, as a reader, tell her in times of trouble, of dis-understanding, to go back to the literature, back to the written word, to find the answers. In an extreme bit of self-reflexivity, Didion’s given so many people dealing with tragedy something magical of her own—this book for us to go back to.
“This is my attempt to make sense of the period that followed, weeks and then months that cut loose any fixed idea I had ever had about death, about illness, about probability and luck, about good fortune and bad, about marriage and children and memory, about grief, about the ways in which people do and do not deal with the fact that life ends, about the shallowness of sanity, about life itself.”