preview

Comparing On Keeping A Notebook 'By Joan Didion And Tim O' Brien

Decent Essays
Open Document

Joan Didion and Tim O'Brien have many differences and similarities in their writing. In On Keeping a Notebook, Didion emphasizes how she keeps a notebook, not a diary,and the differences between a notebook and a diary. She makes numerous other points along the way throughout the writing. O'Brien writes about the Vietnam War and emphasizes items that the men carry, switching from point of views sporadically. Both authors write with a reminiscent tone, as if they are looking back on old memories and jotting them down in a notebook. Even though Didion stays in one point of view throughout the whole piece, and O'Brien switches between characters and points of view rather often, one can still see the similarities in the way they write. Didion cannot remember exactly what might have …show more content…

Who started it, and when, and why?"(O'Brien 38). Neither is fully positive in the way they write. A point made in both pieces has to do with stretching the truth somewhat to make for a better story. Didion mentions how with a diary, one would have to write exactly what happened, whereas with a notebook, she feels she only has to jot down some things. Like she would be able to expand on what happened later, make it up as she goes along. "And yet it is precisely that fictitious crab that makes me see the afternoon all over again, a home movie run all too often, the father bearing gifts, the child weeping, an exercise in family love and guilt"(Didion 83). She says how part of her story about the cracked crab was untrue, and exaggerated, however it is that part that makes her remember and believe it all the more. O'Brien plays with similar ideas about truth, elaborating on it in the chapter How to Tell a True War Story. The story Sanders tells about the men and the mountain, speaks of strange sounds, almost sounds like it's a story about ghosts, and he mentions how he doesn't really remember all of the details, so some of it may be exaggerated.

Get Access