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Apr 12, 2022 · Didion — who gave us “Play It as It Lays” — might have pointed her lens toward a darker, more caustic image.
- Joyce Maynard
Aug 17, 2015 · The sensationalized press coverage of the period has left a permanent image of the late nineteen-sixties as a time when everyone was tripping or stoned.
- Louis Menand
Dec 23, 2021 · Didion recorded how certain arrangements of people or landscapes looked to her eye, how these images struck an inner chord.
Jan 25, 2021 · He explained his theory rarely and badly (hence the endless rancid chestnuts about lean prose, laconic dialogue, and crossing important things out), but Didion didn’t miss the point.
- Nathan Heller
Mar 14, 2023 · An obscurity of scene, mood, or atmosphere that is maybe best captured, among the illustrations in Joan Didion: What She Means, by a Diane Arbus photograph, from 1960, of a New Jersey drive-in movie theater. Is that the sun or moon on screen, clouds scudding across? Points of light in the dark foreground, desires hidden in automobile interiors.
Now, the nature of the cave was such that only its true owner was able to see its special qualities. Where Abraham saw light, Ephron saw darkness. Nevertheless, Abraham did not purchase the place until Sarah passed away, so as not to arouse people’s interest in the place.
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Feb 20, 2022 · For a converging lens, the focal point is the point at which converging light rays cross; for a diverging lens, the focal point is the point from which diverging light rays appear to originate. The distance from the center of the lens to its focal point is called the focal length \(f\).