Page 6-Friday, April 13, 1979-The Michigan Daily Didion speaks on BY RICH LORANGER Joan Didion, a renowned California novelist, captured the attention of many professors and aspiring writers with her talk Wednesday at the Hop- wood ceremonies. Professor John Aldridge, Chairman of the Hopwood Committee, introduced Didion as a woman with much clarity of vision, one who refuses to provide comfort or distraction to a culture already engulfed in it. She spoke on a topic of great interest to her audience, namely "Making Up Stories." To begin, Didion reeled off a long chain of amusing associations that led her from thoughts on Detroit to the Charles Manson murders. This was to illustrate her (really, anyone's) natural flow of thought. She rambled off another train concerning a certain event in her life, and added emotion to give the scenes a story-like quality. THIS, SHE explained, is where a story begins. These associations we all have remind us of our lives, and they come with everything we see or think of. A memory, though, is not actually a story - rather, it tricks you into a story. To "keep down the noise" of your constant associations, you can distract yourself by making them cohere, by binding them together with the emotional impressidhs of your memory. This is called writing a story. Stories don't come naturally, though. She conceives of an idea that could bind his or her thoughts together, and then, as Didion put it, "you have to hammer it, work with it," just like a sculpture. writing She related a .brief anecdote of how Joseph Heller first conceived Catch.22 to show how such an idea comes, a moment of inspiration. He lay resting once upon his bed, when unexpectedly some words flowed eloquently through his head - they were eventually the fir- st two sentences of that novel, and nothing else. DIDION WENT on to claim that the stories you write needn't come fromi experience. There, though, they begin, she said, in this "field of images that 'One thing a writer doesn 't like to be told is that anyone else has ever written a novel.' -Joan Didion assaults us every day we live." The lecture sidetracked for a bit as Didion spoke of her one experience in teaching at Berkley, and of a novel she was working on at the time. One thihg she painfully noticed was that everyone there talked about novels. "One thing a writer doesn't like to be told," she commented, "is that anyone else teas ever written a novel." -Joan Didion; feels a major problemiis that most people think a writer sees; a novel complete from its conception. A case in point was Fitzgerald's The Last Tycoon, which she views as the early form of a brilliant work - yet ma'ny literate people consider it worthless. 4A novel is not a plan carried out," she stated firmly. A Book of Common Prayer was the novel developing in Didion's mind sin part at Berkley. To complete her talk she told a rather intimate account of its development. It began basically as two separate stories, orre in the South and the other in her imaginary Central American country, Boca;Grande. Then, through the inspiration of a character, she united the stories as two parts of. a woman's life. Her mind became coin- pletely caught up in the creative process, and she confided, "While I was writing this I lived in Boca Grande."l In addition to A Book -of Common Prayer, Joan Didion has authored several novels and a collection of essays. She has another such collection, entitled The White Album, coming ut this June. -1 I, ARTS STAFF ARTS EDITORS R. J. SMITH ERIC ZORN THEATER EDITOR JOSH PECK STAFF WRITERS bill barbour, mary bacarella, ton9 bloenk, mark coleman, anthony chen, mark dighton, el-eanora- diliscia, jim eckert, scott eyerly, pat fabrizio, owen gleiberman, kurt grosman, diane haithman, katie herzfeld, steve hook, mark johans- son, matt kopka, mark kowalsky, marty levine, lee levine, ricop loringer, peter manis, anna nissen gerard pape, lily prigionero, kim potter, alan rubenfeld, anne sharpt nina shishkoff, mike taylor, keiti tosolt, peter wallach, dan weiss carol wierzbicki, tim yagle. I- f. M _ 4 1 THE RIVER NIGER By Joseph A.Walker Featuring MEL WINKLER. Guest Actor-in.Residence Wed: April I- Sat. April 14 "PM. Sun.April15 2PM flwer Center I ' e r lh . .. r : I iII I 111 IIIf i'L - I I fAL lJuL LULfI IITRII I IJLII uI FIRI(;JIf I dI 1AIR a ---U-J-m4I"innEl 11 MUNROMwffft i