"We tell ourselves stories in order to live" was the opening line of
Joan Didion's celebrated The White Album. In After Henry, her new
collection of pieces, most of them reported and written for The New York
Review of Books and The New Yorker, she examines, precisely and
suggestively, the stories people tell themselves - about murders and
earthquakes and wildfires, about presidential politics and Patricia
Hearst and Central Park "wilding, " about boom years passing and hard
times coming down - in Washington and in California and in New York.
Joan Didion's two previous collections, Slouching Towards Bethlehem and
The White Album, are now established as classics. Salvador and Miami
stand as hallmarks of political reporting. After Henry is a major
literary event.