Democracy (novel)

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For the Henry Adams novel, see Democracy: An American Novel
Democracy

1995 trade paperback cover
Author Joan Didion
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Novel
Publisher Simon & Schuster (orig. publisher) & Vintage International
Publication date 1984
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages 240 pp (Vintage International paperback edition)
ISBN ISBN 0-679-75485-7 (Vintage International paperback edition)

Democracy, Joan Didion's fourth novel, was published in 1984. Set in Hawaii and Southeast Asia at the end of the Vietnam War, the book tells the story of Inez Victor, wife of U.S. Senator and one-time presidential hopeful Harry Victor, and her enduring romance with Jack Lovett, a CIA agent/war profiteer who dies shortly after extricating Inez's daughter Jessie from Saigon, where the girl had incautiously ventured.

Democracy is unusual in that its narrator is not a character within the novel's world but a voice whom Didion identifies as herself, a writer self-consciously struggling with the ambiguities of her ostensible material, the ironies attendant to narration, and the inevitable contradictions at the heart of any story-telling. Didion's deft and economical use of this conceit allows her to comment not only upon the novel she chose to write, a romantic tragedy, but also upon the novel she chose not to write, a family epic encompassing generations of Inez's wealthy Hawaiian family, artless emblems of the colonial impulse.

What amazes, in the end, is the lightness of Didion's touch, her remarkable ear for the vernacular, and her impeccable comedic timing. For all its weighty themes, and its stark evocation of loss, Democracy is one of the funniest works of 20th century American literary fiction.

At the time Democracy was published, the work was widely recognized as Didion's best novel to date for the skillful way she combined reportorial skill with literary style. However, some critics felt the book's realism undercut its overall achievement as a novel.

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