


Come to Dinner: fifty years of friendship with Joan Didion by Sara Davidson
This remarkable memoir offers a rare, intimate portrait of one of America’s most iconic literary figures—not through her published work, but through the lens of deep, decades-long friendship. With tenderness, wit, and unflinching honesty, Davidson invites readers inside the quiet rituals, long dinners, shared heartbreaks, and enduring conversations that defined her fifty-year bond with Joan Didion.
A true VIP seat at the table, Come to Dinner unveils the Joan few ever saw: fiercely loyal, hilariously self-deprecating, and an unwavering champion of other women writers. This is the story of a literary sisterhood that shaped both women’s lives—and left an indelible mark on modern American letters.
Paperback: 9798998722387
This remarkable memoir offers a rare, intimate portrait of one of America’s most iconic literary figures—not through her published work, but through the lens of deep, decades-long friendship. With tenderness, wit, and unflinching honesty, Davidson invites readers inside the quiet rituals, long dinners, shared heartbreaks, and enduring conversations that defined her fifty-year bond with Joan Didion.
A true VIP seat at the table, Come to Dinner unveils the Joan few ever saw: fiercely loyal, hilariously self-deprecating, and an unwavering champion of other women writers. This is the story of a literary sisterhood that shaped both women’s lives—and left an indelible mark on modern American letters.
Paperback: 9798998722387
This remarkable memoir offers a rare, intimate portrait of one of America’s most iconic literary figures—not through her published work, but through the lens of deep, decades-long friendship. With tenderness, wit, and unflinching honesty, Davidson invites readers inside the quiet rituals, long dinners, shared heartbreaks, and enduring conversations that defined her fifty-year bond with Joan Didion.
A true VIP seat at the table, Come to Dinner unveils the Joan few ever saw: fiercely loyal, hilariously self-deprecating, and an unwavering champion of other women writers. This is the story of a literary sisterhood that shaped both women’s lives—and left an indelible mark on modern American letters.
Paperback: 9798998722387