Modern Australian
The Times

Secret twins? A casually brutal biography of Joan Didion and ‘soul mate’ Eve Babitz blurs ethical boundaries, but exhilarates

  • Written by Astrid Edwards, PhD Candidate and literary critic, The University of Melbourne
Secret twins? A casually brutal biography of Joan Didion and ‘soul mate’ Eve Babitz blurs ethical boundaries, but exhilarates

Lili Anolik admits her first book on Eve Babitz, Hollywood’s Eve, was a way of “driving a stake” through her subject’s heart, hoping to end her self-confessed “unbalanced, fetishistic” obsession with the bohemian LA writer.

Anolik had been in Babitz’s “thrall” for nine years, since she fell hard for her 1974 book Slow Days, Fast Company. Hollywood’s Eve, along with Anolik’s Vanity Fair articles, have been the impetus driving Babitz’s work back to centre stage, resurrecting Babitz as a cultural icon.

Anolik’s obsession did not end with her book, nor with Babitz’s slow passing in December 2021, after living with Huntington’s disease. In January of that year, she received a call from Babitz’s sister Mirandi, saying she had found sealed boxes of photographs and letters buried in the “full-scale filth” of Babitz’s apartment.

Almost exactly a year later, after Babitz’s funeral, Anolik accompanied Mirandi to the library where the boxes were held. There she discovered, among other things, letters to Joan Didion.

Lili Anolik’s book and articles on Eve Babitz helped resurrect her as a cultural icon. Allen & Unwin

Intimacies, controversies and disagreements

Babitz and Didion were close in the 1960s and 1970s. So close that Didion (and her husband, John Gregory Dunne) edited Eve’s Hollywood –  an unprecedented occurrence, as Didion did not edit works written by anyone but her husband.

Babitz was there for Didion’s legendary parties at her Franklin Avenue home in Hollywood, then at her equally famous beach house in Malibu. Those bohemian days are central to this work, of course, brought to life through Anolik’s deliberately casual, yet brutal writing style.

It’s generally reckoned that the Sixties didn’t begin in this country until November 22, 1963, when an assassin took out JFK with a magic bullet. For Los Angeles, however, the beginning came sooner, on August 4, 1962, when Marilyn Monroe took out herself with a Nembutal.

Eve Babitz pierced the mystique swirling around Joan Didion. Bob Weidner/Allen & Unwin

Anolik mines this treasure trove of writings –  journals, letters (both sent and unsent), manuscripts – and excavates intimate details of the private lives of these women not yet on the public record. The clarity with which Babitz pierces the mystique swirling around Didion is remarkable, and is showcased no better than when Babitz writes a letter to Didion taking her to task for her failure to read Virginia Woolf.

Referring to Didion’s New York Times article, published on 30 July 1972, it reads:

The thing beyond what your article on the women’s movement was about was what A Room of One’s Own is about […] for a long, long time women didn’t have any money and didn’t have any time and were considered unfeminine if they shone like you do, Joan […] Could you write what you write if you weren’t so tiny, Joan? Would you be allowed to if you weren’t physically so unthreatening? […] It embarrasses me that you don’t read Virginia Woolf.

Cover photograph by Julian Wasser, who captured iconic photographs of both Didion and Babitz.

This work, Didion & Babitz, could not exist without the storied public writings of both writers, especially their rival 1979 works, The White Album (Didion) and Sex and Rage (Babitz). Anolik uses these cornerstones of 20th-century writing to draw out the intimacies of the writers’ day-to-day lives, piercing the veil of their public personas to reveal the controversies and disagreements and motivations driving their art.

While officially biography, the work also reads as a memoir of Anolik’s relationship with Babitz, as well as Anolik’s intellectual relationship with the published works of these seminal writers.

‘Bear with me, Reader’

Anolik consistently breaks the fourth wall, directly addressing the reader. She writes, “Now, bear with me, Reader, because I’m about to make an intuitive leap and might land way wide of the mark.”

While some readers might find this jarring, the style honours the deliberate rule-breaking of her subjects. These authorial intrusions serve two purposes: to link different sections of the work together, as might happen in a wide-ranging conversation, and to psychoanalyse her subjects.

Here’s one example of Anolik inserting herself into the text and directly telling the reader her thoughts on Didion’s work:

A side note: The one unequivocally admiring piece on a woman that Joan wrote was her Georgia O'Keefe profile. And the reason she was so wild for O'Keefe was precisely because of O'Keefe’s grim-faced and forbidding qualities […] Here’s how you know it was the ultimate compliment for Joan: she paid it to herself […] It was how she saw herself. How she wanted to be seen.

Cover photograph by Julian Wasser.

Anolik repeatedly psychoanalyses photographs of the women, especially those you are likely to find on a tote bag: 20-year-old Babitz playing chess naked with surrealist artist Marcel Duchamp; Didion staring through the camera, cigarette in hand. Both were taken by the same photographer, Julian Wasser, and both women used Wasser’s visual genius to create the image of themselves they wanted the world to see.

This psychoanalysis extends to both women’s addictions and weight. Eve’s drug use and alcoholism were always public, but Anolik suggests Didion was also an alcoholic (along with her husband and daughter, Quintana). Anolik also compares and contrasts their weight –  Eve’s voluptuousness against Didion’s slight frame –  and this is used as a metaphor for their writing.

Eve, an untaught and uncontrollable artistic savant; Didion, a fiercely controlled professional and perfectionist. She also implies Didion had an eating disorder. On her weight, Anolik writes,

that was a matter of genetics and body type, of course. But also, I suspect, choice. There was an overwrought quality to her thinness, almost a hysteria.

There is a blurring of ethics on Anolik’s part here – how much of this is speculation, and how much based on evidence?

Writing LA together

And while Didion (even here) takes centre stage, as the first mentioned in the title, this is a work devoted to Eve Babitz. Anolik forces the reader to consider whether it was Babitz, not Didion, who was the 20th century’s greatest chronicler, with “Joan and Eve writing LA together”.

After all, their intentions were identical, she argues: “to make literature that exploited what was novel and exposed what was familiar in a city, a society, and an epoch under convulsive pressure”. This is a work about two women – Didion and Babitz –  whose lives and careers overlapped. Babitz passed first, on 17 December 2021, aged 78. She was followed by Didion days later, on 23 December 2021, aged 87. Didion & Babitz is an exhilarating read, bringing both Eve and Joan to life for the reader. Anolik, though a journalist by trade, makes no attempt to report impartially here, admitting her “love for Eve’s astonishing, reckless, wholly original personality and talent”. If it were possible to imagine the responses of the women themselves to this work, one suspects Babitz would be thrilled, Didion livid. Still, for the lovers of Didion out there, there are glimmers of a Joan not yet revealed in print. As Anolik writes, “each was the closest the other had to a secret twin or sharer. To a soul mate”. Authors: Astrid Edwards, PhD Candidate and literary critic, The University of Melbourne

Read more https://theconversation.com/secret-twins-a-casually-brutal-biography-of-joan-didion-and-soul-mate-eve-babitz-blurs-ethical-boundaries-but-exhilarates-243687

Diesel Shortage to Impact Trades and Contractors

Strait of Hormuz blockage affecting all major parts of trades and construction Trades and construction across residential, commercial and industria...

Why Holiday Home Owners Turn to Rental Management Agents

The Allure — and the Reality — of Renting Out Your Property Owning a holiday home is a dream for many Australians. Whether it's a beachside sha...

Why Finding Reliable Doctors In Bundoora Is Important For Long-Term Health

Access to quality healthcare plays an important role in maintaining overall wellbeing and managing health concerns early. Trusted Doctors in Bundoor...

Understanding the Different Types of Car Services: Minor vs Major

When it comes to car maintenance, one of the most important things every vehicle owner should understand is the difference between a minor and a maj...

How Superannuation and TPD Insurance Work Together

Superannuation is an essential part of financial planning in Australia. It is designed to provide individuals with income during retirement, helping...

Tiny Towns funding granted for Mt Hotham and Mt Buller upgrades

Alpine Resorts Victoria (ARV) has welcomed funding support from the Victorian Government’s  Tiny Towns Fund, with both Mt Hotham and Mt Buller se...

Locksmith Services: Why Professional Security Solutions Matter More Than Ever

Security is a critical concern for homeowners, businesses, and vehicle owners alike. Whether it involves protecting a property, replacing damaged lo...

Why Tooth Fillings Are Important For Protecting Damaged Teeth

Cavities and minor tooth damage are common dental problems that can worsen if left untreated. Professional tooth fillings help restore damaged teeth, ...

The Connection Between Visibility and Driver Confidence

Operating a vehicle safely requires an immediate, uncompromised stream of visual information from the surrounding road environment. A driver's decis...

Important Things To Know Before Starting An SMSF Setup

Planning for retirement requires careful financial decisions, and many Australians are now looking for more direct control over how their superannua...

Why Retail Cleaning Plays a Key Role in Customer Experience and Business Success

Professional retail cleaning services are an essential part of maintaining a welcoming, safe, and professional environment for customers and staff...

Simple Ways to Make a Commercial Property More Appealing to Buyers

Selling or leasing a commercial property isn’t just about listing the square metres, taking a few photos and waiting for the right person to appea...

What Café Owners Should Know Before Upgrading Their Display Setup

A café display fridge does a lot more than keep cakes cold and sandwiches fresh. It quietly shapes the way customers browse, the way staff move beh...

Creating a Backyard That Feels Comfortable All Year Round

A great backyard doesn’t need to be huge, expensive or perfectly styled. Most of the time, the spaces people actually use are the ones that feel e...

How Homeowners Can Make Smarter Energy Decisions Before Upgrading

Energy upgrades used to feel like something you only looked into after a power bill gave you a nasty surprise. These days, though, more homeowners a...

Why Retail CX Breaks During Peak Sales Events and How to Prevent It

Retail customer experience has become one of the most important drivers of revenue growth, especially during high-intensity sales periods. However, ev...

15 South Indian Dishes Everyone Should Try

If your only experience of "Indian food" is butter chicken and garlic naan, South Indian cuisine is going to feel like discovering an entirely new c...

What Every Homeowner Should Know About Roof and Drainage Maintenance

A home's roof and drainage system work together every day to protect the property from water damage. While many homeowners focus on visible areas such...