Awards & Winners

Joan Didion

Date of Birth 05-December-1934
Place of Birth Sacramento
(California, United States of America, Sacramento County, Northern California, Area code 916)
Nationality United States of America
Profession Novelist, Memoirist, Author, Essayist
Quotes
  • Of course great hotels have always been social ideas, flawless mirrors to the particular societies they service.
  • A place belongs forever to whoever claims it hardest, remembers it most obsessively, wrenches it from itself, shapes it, renders it, loves it so radically that he remakes it in his own image.
  • The fancy that extraterrestrial life is by definition of a higher order than our own is one that soothes all children, and many writers.
  • The willingness to accept responsibility for one's own life is the source from which self-respect springs.
  • The secret point of money and power in America is neither the things that money can buy nor power for power's sake... but absolute personal freedom, mobility, privacy. It is the instinct which drove America to the Pacific, all through the nineteenth century, the desire to be able to find a restaurant open in case you want a sandwich, to be a free agent, live by one's own rules.
  • A pool is, for many of us in the West, a symbol not of affluence but of order, of control over the uncontrollable. A pool is water, made available and useful, and is, as such, infinitely soothing to the western eye.
  • Grammar is a piano I play by ear. All I know about grammar is its power.
  • We were that generation called silent, but we were silent neither, as some thought, because we shared the period's official optimism nor, as others thought, because we feared its official repression. We were silent because the exhilaration of social action seemed to many of us just one more way of escaping the personal, of masking for a while that dread of the meaningless which was man's fate.
  • 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.
  • There is in Hollywood, as in all cultures in which gambling is the central activity, a lowered sexual energy, an inability to devote more than token attention to the preoccupations of the society outside. The action is everything, more consuming than sex, more immediate than politics; more important always than the acquisition of money, which is never, for the gambler, the true point of the exercise.
  • It is impossible to think of Howard Hughes without seeing the apparently bottomless gulf between what we say we want and what we do want, between what we officially admire and secretly desire, between, in the largest sense, the people we marry and the people we love. In a nation which increasingly appears to prize social virtues, Howard Hughes remains not merely antisocial but grandly, brilliantly, surpassingly, asocial. He is the last private man, the dream we no longer admit.
  • Many people I know in Los Angeles believe that the Sixties ended abruptly on August 9, 1969, ended at the exact moment when word of the murders on Cielo Drive traveled like brushfire through the community, and in a sense this is true. The tension broke that day. The paranoia was fulfilled.
  • We are well advised to keep on nodding terms with the people we used to be, whether we find them attractive company or not. Otherwise they turn up unannounced and surprise us, come hammering on the mind's door at 4am of a bad night and demand to know who deserted them, who betrayed them, who is going to make amends. We forget all too soon the things we thought we could never forget.
  • We forget all too soon the things we thought we could never forget.
  • To have that sense of one's intrinsic worth which constitutes self-respect is potentially to have everything: the ability to discriminate, to love and to remain indifferent. To lack it is to be locked within oneself, paradoxically incapable of either love or indifference.
  • Americans are uneasy with their possessions, guilty about power, all of which is difficult for Europeans to perceive because they are themselves so truly materialistic, so versed in the uses of power.
  • Writers are always selling somebody out.
Joan Didion is an American author best known for her novels and her literary journalism. Her novels and essays explore the disintegration of American morals and cultural chaos, where the overriding theme is individual and social fragmentation. A sense of anxiety or dread permeates much of her work.

Awards by Joan Didion

Check all the awards nominated and won by Joan Didion.

2006


Nominations 2006 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography The Year of Magical Thinking

2005


National Book Award for Nonfiction
Honored for : The Year of Magical Thinking
American Academy of Arts and Letters Gold Medal for Belles Lettres and Criticism
New York Times 10 Best Books of the Year
Honored for : The Year of Magical Thinking

Nominations 2005 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
National Book Award for Nonfiction The Year of Magical Thinking
National Book Critics Circle Award for Memoir/Autobiography The Year of Magical Thinking

2004


Clifton Fadiman Medal For Excellence In Fiction
Honored for : A Book of Common Prayer

1981


Nominations 1981 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
National Book Award for General Nonfiction (Paperback) The White Album