Jumat, 20 Desember 2013

[H157.Ebook] Get Free Ebook Slouching Towards Bethlehem, by Joan Didion

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Slouching Towards Bethlehem, by Joan Didion

Slouching Towards Bethlehem, by Joan Didion



Slouching Towards Bethlehem, by Joan Didion

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Slouching Towards Bethlehem, by Joan Didion

2013 Audie Award Nominee, Short Stories/Collections

Universally acclaimed from the time it was first published in 1968, Slouching Towards Bethlehem has been admired for decades as a stylistic masterpiece. Academy Award-winning actress Diane Keaton (Annie Hall, The Family Stone) performs these classic essays, including the title piece, which will transport the listener back to a unique time and place: the Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco during the neighborhood’s heyday as a countercultural center.

This is Joan Didion’s first work of nonfiction, offering an incisive look at the mood of 1960s America and providing an essential portrait of the Californian counterculture. She explores the influences of John Wayne and Howard Hughes, and offers ruminations on the nature of good and evil in a Death Valley motel room. Taking its title from W. B. Yeats’ poem "The Second Coming," the essays in Slouching Towards Bethlehem all reflect, in one way or another, that "the center cannot hold."

Slouching Towards Bethlehem is part of Audible’s A-List Collection, featuring the world’s most celebrated actors narrating distinguished works of literature that each star had a hand in selecting.

  • Sales Rank: #1236529 in Books
  • Published on: 2014-07-22
  • Formats: Audiobook, MP3 Audio, Unabridged
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 6.75" h x .50" w x 5.25" l, .15 pounds
  • Running time: 7 Hours
  • Binding: MP3 CD
  • 6 pages

Review
"A slant vision that is arresting and unique . . . Didion might be an observer from another planet--one so edgy and alert that she ends up knowing more about our own world than we know ourselves."
        --Anne Tyler

"The story between the lines of Slouching Towards Bethlehem is surely not so much 'California' as it is [Didion's] ability to make us share her passionate sense of it."
        --Alfred Kazin

From the Inside Flap
Upon its publication in 1968, Slouching Towards Bethlehem confirmed Joan Didion as one of the most prominent writers on the literary scene. Her unblinking vision and deadpan tone have influenced subsequent generations of reporters and essayists, changing our expectations of style, voice, and the artistic possibilities of nonfiction.
        
"In her portraits of people," The New York Times Book Review wrote, "Didion is not out to expose but to understand, and she shows us actors and millionaires, doomed brides and naïve acid-trippers, left-wing ideologues and snobs of the Hawaiian aristocracy in a way that makes them neither villainous nor glamorous, but alive and botched and often mournfully beautiful. . . . A rare display of some of the best prose written today in this country."
        
In essay after essay, Didion captures the dislocation of the 1960s, the disorientation of a country shredding itself apart with social change. Her essays not only describe the subject at hand--the murderous housewife, the little girl trailing the rock group, the millionaire bunkered in his mansion--but also offer a broader vision of America, one that is both terrifying and tender, ominous and uniquely her own.
        
Joyce Carol Oates has written, "Joan Didion is one of the very few writers of our time who approaches her terrible subject with absolute seriousness, with fear and humility and awe. Her powerful irony is often sorrowful rather than clever. . . . She has been an articulate witness to the most stubborn and intractable truths of our time, a memorable voice, partly eulogistic, partly despairing; always in control."

From the Back Cover
"A slant vision that is arresting and unique . . . Didion might be an observer from another planet--one so edgy and alert that she ends up knowing more about our own world than we know ourselves."
        --Anne Tyler

"The story between the lines of Slouching Towards Bethlehem is surely not so much 'California' as it is [Didion's] ability to make us share her passionate sense of it."
        --Alfred Kazin

Most helpful customer reviews

19 of 19 people found the following review helpful.
Probably one of the best books I have ever read
By Amazon Customer
Probably one of the best books I have ever read. I had been meaning to pick it up for a while, and finally got around to it when I needed a good beach read. This book is a collection of short stories divided into three sections. There are a few fictional short stories which are very well written. Perhaps my favorite part of the book is her philosophical musings about life in general, my personal favorite being "On Self-Respect" as it particularly spoke to me at this point in my life. I think this is an essential read for anyone is their early-twenties, as it reminds us that there is so much life ahead of us and we are still incredibly young and inexperienced.

15 of 16 people found the following review helpful.
The breakout work by a fantastic writer. Fifty years on we can see how prescient she was, and how timeless her talent.
By Graham H. Seibert
Joan Didion is a pleasure to read. She is not the kind of author who appealed to me in my youth. Although I knew of her, the first book that I read was Blue Nights, which I reviewed very favorably in 2011.

An Internet article recently piqued my interest in Slouching Toward Bethlehem. It is a collection of essays written in the 1960s, all of them more than 50 years old. This is before most readers were born, talking about a time and place that they did not experience.

I am only eight years younger than Didion, and from California. I lived in the Haight-Ashbury when she reported when she wrote the most famous piece here, slouching toward Bethlehem. Reading it makes me acutely aware of how blind I was to what was going on around.

She writes also about Sacramento, Los Angeles, New York, and other places Las Vegas, and other places that have certainly changed a lot since. It's one of those "you had to be there" sensations.

One of the things that strikes me is how grounded, how sensible Didion was in seeing exactly what was going on. Her prose is exquisite. She not only comes up with the right word, the mot juste, but she often makes it up. Her writing is as fresh after 50 years, as it was back then. As it must've been back then. It is no wonder to me that she burst on the scene so explosively in the 1960s.

Hers was a generation of great writers. Tom Wolfe did the same kind of thing. Hunter S. Thompson wasn't far off. It was a generation of both readers and writers. If this kind of talent is out there today, I am not seeing it.

I include a table of contents, and offer my own comments on some of the some of the articles on some of the pieces that she's done.

===I Life Styles in the Golden Land =====
===========Some Dreamers of the Golden Dream =====

Walmart was just a dream and Sam Walton's eyes, but the Walmart style had evolved in full glory in the deserts of California east of Los Angeles. A spectacularly trashy murder trial.

===========John Wayne: A Love Song =====

Appreciation for a real man, who knew what he was and didn't pretend to be anything more.

===========Where the Kissing Never Stops =====

A touching, affectionate portrait of Joan Baez. She is a woman from a highly intellectual background who could simply accept her gift and not be spoiled by it.

===========Comrade Laski, C.P.U.S.A. (M.-L.) =====

A true believer. The other Communists were all sellouts except for the Communist Party USA (Marxist-Leninist)

===========7000 Romaine, Los Angeles 38 =====

A paean to Howard Hughes, who represented America's real values and aspirations despite our pretentious claims to the contrary.

===========California Dreaming =====

A think tank on the Santa Barbara coast; the opposite of all things John Birch.

===========Marrying Absurd =====

Las Vegas, the most phony, plastic city on earth, and the home of the quickie marriage.

===========Slouching Towards Bethlehem =====

The centerpiece of the book. A extended journalistic tour through the Haight-Ashbury of 1966 – 67. The title comes from the Yeats poem.

This single essay did more than anything else to cement Didion's reputation as a journalist who could see beneath the surface and around the corners, and had a gift for portraying visual concept, a mood, or a sense of anomie so vividly that it brought the reader immediately to the scene of the action.

I was a young man living at 340 Carl St., San Francisco, five blocks from the Haight, as she wrote this. I missed 90% of it. Her powers of perception were incredible, and her sense of the terrible portent was equally prescient.

The hippie scene devastated our family. My two girl cousins, born in the 50s, disappeared into the San Francisco scene about this time. Both dead now, brain dead long before their bodies collapsed, they bore between them five children by five men.

Sex drugs and rock 'n' roll devastated my El Cerrito California high school class. The only two who became famous were Roy Jacuzzi, who coasted on a family connection, and Barr Rosenberg, whose astronomical intelligence gave him the freedom to pursue whatever lifestyle he chose. Most of my class tried drugs, and a large number lost direction. Cartoonist Joel Beck, sought by Playboy and every publisher around, drugged himself to death. Others simply wandered aimlessly through life. Didion expressed her foreboding extremely well.

=== II Personals =====
===========On Keeping a Notebook =====

However chaotic it may have been, Didion's notebook was a useful tool in her literary success.

===========On Self-Respect =====

Self-respect is essential. It was amazingly detached from reality. Sometimes the least worthy people have the greatest sense of self respect. And it serves them well, in general.

===========I Can't Get That Monster out of My Mind =====

A musing on Hollywood, the destroyer. Didion wryly notes that Hollywood can't destroy what was not there in the first place, but it offers a very convenient excuse.

===========On Morality =====

There is real morality and sham morality, the morale the of political poseurs.

Quote: " And of course it is all right to do that; that is how, immemorially, things have gotten done. But I think it is all right only so long as we do not delude ourselves about what we are doing, and why. It is all right only so long as we remember that all the ad hoc committees, all the picket lines, all the brave signatures in The New York Times, all the tools of agitprop straight across the spectrum, do not confer upon anyone any ipso facto virtue. It is all right only so long as we recognize that the end may or may not be expedient, may or may not be a good idea, but in any case has nothing to do with “morality.” Because when we start deceiving ourselves into thinking not that we want something or need something, not that it is a pragmatic necessity for us to have it, but that it is a moral imperative that we have it, then is when we join the fashionable madmen, and then is when the thin whine of hysteria is heard in the land, and then is when we are in bad trouble. And I suspect we are already there."

===========On Going Home=====

This is a short piece about daughter Quintana Roo's first birthday. A touching story, and a lovely introduction to the much fuller picture that she offers in Blue Nights.

Quote: " Or perhaps it is not any more. Sometimes I think that those of us who are now in our thirties were born into the last generation to carry the burden of “home,” to find in family life the source of all tension and drama. I had by all objective accounts a “normal” and a “happy” family situation, and yet I was almost thirty years old before I could talk to my family on the telephone without crying after I had hung up. We did not fight. Nothing was wrong. And yet some nameless anxiety colored the emotional charges between me and the place that I came from. The question of whether or not you could go home again was a very real part of the sentimental and largely literary baggage with which we left home in the fifties; I suspect that it is irrelevant to the children born of the fragmentation after World War II."

" It is time for the baby’s birthday party: a white cake, strawberry-marshmallow ice cream, a bottle of champagne saved from another party. In the evening, after she has gone to sleep, I kneel beside the crib and touch her face, where it is pressed against the slats, with mine. She is an open and trusting child, unprepared for and unaccustomed to the ambushes of family life, and perhaps it is just as well that I can offer her little of that life. I would like to give her more. I would like to promise her that she will grow up with a sense of her cousins and of rivers and of her great-grandmother’s teacups, would like to pledge her a picnic on a river with fried chicken and her hair uncombed, would like to give her home for her birthday, but we live differently now and I can promise her nothing like that. I give her a xylophone and a sundress from Madeira, and promise to tell her a funny story."

===III Seven Places of the Mind =====
===========Notes from a Native Daughter =====

Didion is fourth generation Californian. Her forebears came even before the gold rush. She has a marvelous sense of place, and expresses it in this piece.

===========Letter from Paradise, 21° 19’ N., 157° 52’ W =====

Notes about Hawaii, devastated in the Second World War and staging ground for the war in Vietnam as she wrote this piece. Rings true with me – I spent time there flying to and from Vietnam.

===========Rock of Ages =====

A visit to Alcatraz three years after it was decommissioned.

===========The Seacoast of Despair =====

The ghost mansions of Newport Rhode Island, and musings on the great wealth and perhaps spiritual poverty of those who built them.

===========Guaymas, Sonora =====

The Mexican high desert but

===========Los Angeles Notebook =====

A portrait in words of Los Angeles, where Didion spent most of her career.

===========Goodbye to All That =====

Reminiscences of the first years of her career in New York City. It goes from everything being fresh, wonderful and exciting to "seen that, done that" after five years, very happily moving back to the West Coast with her husband.

9 of 10 people found the following review helpful.
Some of the best writing ever committed to page
By Reviews
One of my favorite books of all time, I've purchased multiple copies just to give to friends, as I think of it as required reading. Multiple stories and essays fill this book, each one an entire world on its own. Whether exploring the world of San Francisco in the 60s, San Bernardino's uglier side, or the world of the mind, Joan Didion explores each without any fear of what she might find, and reports back in such a captivating way as to keep you wanting more. After each essay, I was left wishing that the story had been an entire novel rather than a 5-70 page story.

This is high art, I compare the prose of Joan Didion to the genius of Proust. She takes you by the hand on a journey through the human condition. Like Proust, I believe anyone who reads this book will be a better person. To tell the truth, this book changed my life, especially the essay on self respect.

Must read, pick it up today! If you have it sitting on your shelf, do yourself a favor and open it today.

See all 150 customer reviews...

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