‘This happened on December 30, 2003. That may seem a while ago but it won't when
it happens to you…’ Joan Didion explores an intensely personal yet universal experience: several
days before Christmas 2003, John Gregory Dunne and Joan Didion saw their only
daughter, Quintana, fall ill with what seemed at first flu, then pneumonia, then
complete septic shock. She was put into an induced coma and placed on life
support. Days later – the night before New Year’s Eve – the Dunnes were just
sitting down to dinner after visiting the hospital when John Gregory Dunne
suffered a massive and fatal coronary. In a second, this close, symbiotic
partnership of forty years was over. Four weeks later, their daughter pulled
through. Two months after that, arriving at LAX, she collapsed and underwent six
hours of brain surgery at UCLA Medical Center to relieve a massive hematoma. This powerful book is Didion's ‘attempt to make sense of the weeks and then
months that cut loose any fixed idea I ever had about death, about illness…about
marriage and children and memory…about the shallowness of sanity, about life
itself’.