Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Now’s your chance to buy items once owned by Joan Didion

- By John Warner John Warner is the author of “Why They Can’t Write: Killing the Five-Paragraph Essay and Other Necessitie­s.” Twitter @biblioracl­e

I’m sitting here wondering if Joan Didion had a clock radio.

Let me back up and explain.

In 2019, I wrote a column about an auction of the late author Philip Roth’s effects. I jokingly speculated that I could perhaps bid on his Proton 320 clock radio alarm clock, having precisely zero intention of actually bidding.

And yet, at the end of the online bidding for Philip Roth’s alarm clock, I was victorious. It sits on a shelf in my home office, displaying the time, and giving me access to over-the-air broadcasts on the AM and FM bands.

As of yet, it has not transferre­d any of Roth’s literary genius to me, but I still get a kick out of seeing it there and thinking about how I got so carried away in my pursuit of an object once owned by a writer whose books seem likely to endure well past my lifetime.

On Nov. 16, 248 lots of Joan Didion’s effects are being auctioned off by Stair Galleries in in Hudson, New York, and I’m ready to become the foremost collector of author-owned clock radios.

If you are interested in owning something once owned by the author of such widely revered books as “The White Album” and “The Year of Magical Thinking,” you’re not alone. Stair Galleries has reportedly been inundated with interest from people desperate to possess anything once touched by Didion, including a single paper clip.

Many of the lots are art owned and previously hung in Didion’s New York apartment, including prints by Cy Twombly and Edward Ruscha, and a signed Annie Leibovitz portrait of Didion, her husband John Gregory Dunne, brother-in-law Dominick Dunne and nephew Griffin Dunne, the actor who also directed a (Biblioracl­e approved) 2017 documentar­y on his aunt, “Joan Didion: The Center Will Not Hold.”

There’s also some nice-looking furniture, some less nice-looking furniture, several lots of desk bric-a-brac (scissors, pens). There are numerous blank notebooks, suggesting Didion is like a lot of other writers who know the worst thing is to be caught short when you need to jot something down.

If you’re a newbie to the bidding on the effects of a famous deceased author game, let me warn you that the two IBM Wheelwrite­r 5 typewriter­s are going to be far too rich for your blood, as you may be competing for them against the likes of famous typewriter collector Tom Hanks.

Philip Roth’s Olivetti manual went for $17,500, well above the estimated $300 to $500. His IBM Selectric IIs went for $4,800 and $5,000.

As Didion’s stature has only grown since her passing, while Roth’s was somewhat in decline, I expect the action will be even heavier for her items. Alas, there is no clock radio, so my quest to corner the market on ’80s era electronic­s once owned by great writers will not progress.

I am intrigued by several lots containing personal copies of books from her library, including one of “Women Poets” featuring books by Sylvia Plath, Emily Dickinson, Anne Sexton and others.

You can own Didion’s entire library of Hemingway’s books, Orwell’s books, Fitzgerald’s books, Norman Mailer’s books, John Updike’s books and William F. Buckley’s books. (People forget that Didion started her career as a conservati­ve.)

If you do decide to join in and find yourself in a battle to the last dollar for Didion’s collection of Philip Roth’s books, you’ll know it’s me.

I think they’ll look good next to his clock radio.

 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Items from Joan Didion’s estate sale auction hosted by Stair Galleries in Hudson, New York. Hundreds of the late revered writer’s furnishing­s and personal items will be sold at auction Nov. 16, offering fans the opportunit­y to acquire a piece of her legacy.
THE NEW YORK TIMES Items from Joan Didion’s estate sale auction hosted by Stair Galleries in Hudson, New York. Hundreds of the late revered writer’s furnishing­s and personal items will be sold at auction Nov. 16, offering fans the opportunit­y to acquire a piece of her legacy.

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