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Didion and Babitz Summary and Analysis - booksthatslay. com Didion and Babitz by Lili Anolik is a sharp, deeply evocative double portrait of two contrasting women who helped define the literary and cultural fabric of Los Angeles in the latter half of the 20th century Through the lens of Eve Babitz’s chaotic charisma and Joan Didion’s cool detachment, Anolik reconstructs not just individual trajectories, but a broader narrative about womanhood
What is the meaning of a cool detachment from his characters . . . If an author has a cool detachment from his characters, it means he has a lack of emotional investment in his characters and can write them objectively He is not, therefore, trying to portray certain of their personality traits as positive or negative, or in any other way putting a particular character above the plot
The State of Us: An Interview with Charlie Hill – 3:AM Magazine You have an affinity for writing at a distance, with a cool detachment, but you’ve also long been fascinated with interiority and modernist immersion Both kinds of fiction are apparent in The State of Us
Emotional Distance as Narrative Strategy in Elizabeth Spencers Fiction her capacity for cool detachment "1 This detachment causes her to pass over emotional obstacles with wry or ironic understatement, not allowing herself or her reader to dwell on the misery that her characters accept as a natural part of life
Cool Is Detachment - The Odyssey Online In an interview with comedian and podcaster, Marc Maron, on his show WTF, acclaimed actor, writer, and renaissance man, Ethan Hawke discussed a project that was a possibility in the past but had fizzled out The project was a biopic on American jazz trumpeter and vocalist, Chet Baker
The Kindly Ones by Jonathan Littell | Waterstones The force and cool detachment with which author Jonathan Littell describes the physical realities of war and mass murder are searing He has spent years on his research and clings closely to the historical record but this fictional presentation brings the accounts horrifically alive - Mary Brodbin, Socialist Review