cover image Didion and Babitz

Didion and Babitz

Lili Anolik. Scribner, $29.99 (352p) ISBN 978-1-6680-6548-8

Journalist Anolik follows up Hollywood’s Eve, her 2019 biography of writer Eve Babitz (1943–2021), with a revealing investigation of Babitz’s complicated relationship with Joan Didion (1934–2021). Tracing how Didion served as Babitz’s mentor, ersatz mother, and nemesis over the course of their lives, Anolik recounts how the two met in June 1967 after Babitz fell in with the Hollywood crowd that congregated at Didion’s house parties. Didion took a liking to Babitz’s genre-straddling pieces and used her clout to secure Babitz’s first byline, an essay about the death of her high school classmate published in Rolling Stone’s fiction section in 1971. Drawing on previously unreported correspondence, Anolik reveals that Didion edited the manuscript for Babitz’s first book, Eve’s Hollywood, but their relationship soured as Didion’s sometimes harsh criticism left Babitz so indignant she eventually fired Didion. Anolik traces their divergent paths over the ensuing decades, describing how Babitz’s star burned brightly before flaming out while Didion methodically built a reputation as the consummate writer. Though Anolik admits her bias for Babitz (“Joan is somebody I naturally root against”), she provides astute character portraits of both writers, suggesting that though Didion was disciplined and spare where Babitz was sensual and lush, the two shared a single-minded commitment to their artistry. It’s a crackling dual biography of two of L.A.’s brightest literary lights. Agent: Jennifer Joel, CAA. (Nov.)