Home

Didion

Didion is a surname. It is relatively uncommon in the United States, and its exact origin is not widely documented. The name is most commonly associated with the American writer Joan Didion (1934–2021).

Joan Didion was a novelist, essayist, and journalist whose work helped shape American literary nonfiction beginning

Legacy of the surname in public discourse rests largely on Didion’s influence in American letters. While the

in
the
1960s.
Notable
works
include
Slouching
Towards
Bethlehem
(1968),
a
collection
of
cultural
reportage;
Play
It
as
It
Lays
(1970),
a
novel;
and
The
White
Album
(1981),
a
volume
of
essays
on
American
culture
and
politics.
She
later
published
memoirs
such
as
The
Year
of
Magical
Thinking
(2005),
about
the
death
of
her
husband,
John
Gregory
Dunne,
and
Blue
Nights
(2011),
which
addresses
aging
and
her
daughter's
illness
and
death.
Didion's
prose
is
known
for
its
precise,
lucid
style,
careful
observation,
and
exploration
of
memory,
identity,
and
media
representation.
She
lived
in
California
and
New
York
and
contributed
to
magazines
including
The
New
Yorker
and
Vogue.
name
Didion
remains
relatively
uncommon,
it
is
most
closely
associated
with
her
body
of
work
and
its
impact
on
memoir
and
literary
journalism.