The Uptown Local
Joy, Death, and Joan Didion: A Memoir
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- USD 9.99
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- USD 9.99
Descripción editorial
A brilliant debut memoir about a young writer—struggling with depression, family issues, and addiction—and his life-changing decade working for Joan Didion
As an aspiring novelist in his early twenties, Cory Leadbeater was presented with an opportunity to work for a well-known writer whose identity was kept confidential. Since the tumultuous days of childhood, Cory had sought refuge from the rougher parts of life in the pages of books. Suddenly, he found himself the personal assistant to a titan of literature: Joan Didion.
In the nine years that followed, Cory shared Joan’s rarefied world, transformed not only by her blazing intellect but by her generous friendship and mentorship. Together they recited poetry in the mornings, dined with Supreme Court justices, attended art openings, smoked a single cigarette before bed.
But secretly, Cory was spiraling. He reeled from the death of a close friend. He spent his weekends at a federal prison, visiting his father as he served time for fraud. He struggled day after day to write the novel that would validate him as a real writer. And meanwhile, the forces of addiction and depression loomed large.
In hypnotic prose that pulses with life and longing, The Uptown Local explores the fault lines of class, family, loss, and creativity. It is a love letter to a cultural icon—and a moving testament to the relationships that sustain us in the eternal pursuit of a life worth living.
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Leadbeater debuts with a stirring account of his time working for Joan Didion (1934–2021) in the final years of her life. While growing up in New Jersey, Leadbeater endured horrific physical and psychological abuse from his father. To cope, he threw himself into reading and writing, and eventually gained admission to Columbia University's English program in 2012. The next year, Leadbeater accepted a position assisting a well-known but unnamed writer who needed help with "all kinds of things." The employer, it turned out, was Didion. The two bonded, and Leadbeater, who had been commuting to classes from New Jersey, eventually moved in with Didion in Manhattan. With her help, he endured his father's arrest for fraud, the death of a friend, and persistent thoughts of suicide. Quotidian tasks like ordering tissues bumped against casually glamorous endeavors, including dinners at Didion's apartment with "Oscar winners, California governors, and Supreme Court justices." Despite considering the period "in some ways a ludicrous fantasy," Leadbeater credits Didion with advising him to "catalogue all the aspects of myself that seemed to operate without harmony or precision... because accurate accounting mattered more than neat narrative." This gloriously written recollection does right by Didion's advice.