Blue Nights
By Joan Didion
ALFRED A. KNOPF
In 2005, Joan Didion won a National Book Award for The Year of Magical Thinking, an account of her husband’s sudden death while Quintana, their only child, languished in hospitals, stricken with a bevy of life-threatening diseases. (She died before the book was released.) Blue Nights is also about Quintana, but it isn’t nostalgic. Didion interrogates herself ruthlessly about her own mortality and maternal abilities. What materializes is a heartbreaking portrait of the family’s implosion. Of the church wall where her husband’s ashes were interred, Didion writes: “There had been two spaces remaining, the names not yet engraved. Now there was one.”