The Year of Magical Thinking
(2005), by Joan Didion (b. 1934), is an account of the year following the death of the author's husband John Gregory Dunne (1932–2003). Published by Knopf in October 2005, the book was immediately acclaimed as a classic in the genre of mourning literature. It won the National Book Award in November 2005 and was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award [1] as well as the Pulitzer Prize for Biography/Autobiography. [2]
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THE YEAR OF MAGICAL THINKING TICKETS
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Structure and themes
The book recounts Didion's experiences of
grief after Dunne's 2003 death of a
cardiac arrest in their
New York apartment. Days before his death, their daughter Quintana Roo Dunne Michael was hospitalized in New York with
pneumonia which developed into
septic shock; she was still unconscious when her father died. During 2004 Quintana Roo was again hospitalized after a collapse and
bleeding in her brain.
The narrative structure of the book follows Didion's re-living and re-analysis of her husband's death throughout the year following it, in addition to caring for Quintana. With each replay of the event, the focus on certain emotional and physical aspects of the experience shifts. Didion also incorporates medical and psychological research on grief and illness into the book.
The title of the book refers to
magical thinking in the
anthropological sense, thinking that if a person hopes for something enough or performs the right actions that an unavoidable event can be averted. Didion reports many instances of her own magical thinking, particularly the story in which she cannot give away Dunne's shoes, as he would need them when he returned.
[3] The experience of
insanity or
derangement that is part of grief is a major theme, one that Didion was unable to find a great deal of existing literature about.
[4]
Didion applies the iconic reportorial detachment for which she is known to her own experience of grieving; there are few expressions of raw emotion. Through observation and analysis of changes in her own behavior and abilities, she indirectly expresses the toll her grief is taking. She is haunted by questions concerning the medical details of her husband's death, the possibility that he sensed it in advance, and how she might have made his remaining time more meaningful. Fleeting memories of events and persistent snippets of past conversations with John take on a new significance. Her daughter's continuing health problems and hospitalizations further compound and interrupt the natural course of grief.
Writing process
Didion wrote
The Year of Magical Thinking
between October 4, 2004 and December 31 the same year, completing it a year and a day after Dunne died.
[5] Notes she made during Quintana's hospitalisations became part of the book.
[6] Quintana Roo Dunne Michael died of
pancreatitis on August 26, 2005 prior to the publication of the book, but Didion told the press that she would not revise the manuscript.
[7]
The Play
See also: The Year of Magical Thinking (Play)
On
March 29, 2007, Didion's adaptation of her book for
Broadway, directed by
David Hare, opened with
Vanessa Redgrave as the sole cast member. The play expands upon the memoir by dealing with Quintana's death. Redgrave reprised her role to largely positive reviews at
London's
National Theatre. This production is set to tour the world, dates already announced include
Salzburg,
Bath and
Cheltenham.
[8] The play was also performed in the
Sydney Theatre Company's 2008 season, starring
Robyn Nevin and directed by
Cate Blanchett.
[9]
References and notes
- All Past National Book Critics Circle Award Winners and Finalists
- The Pulitzer Prizes
- Amid unbearable sorrow, she shows her might
- When Everything Changes
- The years of writing magically
- Q: How were you able to keep writing after the death of your husband? A: There was nothing else to do. I had to write my way out of it
- Joan Didion's New Book Faces Tragedy
- Vanessa Redgrave and Joan Didion, Working on a Merger
- Theatre's dream team keeps Nevin in the act