A Book of Common Prayer
A Book of Common Prayer is a novel by American author Joan Didion, published in 1977 by Simon & Schuster.[1]
Didion's third novel, it is narrated by Grace Strasser-Mendana, a longtime resident of the fictional Central American republic of Boca Grande, who observes and chronicles the life of Charlotte Douglas, a displaced American woman whose daughter becomes involved in revolutionary activities.[2][3]
Set against a backdrop of endemic political coups, oil-driven corruption, and guerrilla insurgencies in the 1970s, the narrative intertwines personal disintegration with broader societal collapse, reflecting Didion's journalistic eye for the absurdities and inevitabilities of upheaval.[4][3]
While Didion's nonfiction essays garnered greater critical acclaim for their incisive cultural analysis, the novel received mixed reviews, praised for its taut prose and thematic ambition but critiqued for its elusive structure and emotional detachment.[2][4]
The work exemplifies Didion's recurring motifs of delusion, loss, and the fragility of order, drawing from her travels and observations in Latin America to construct a fictional lens on expatriate disconnection and revolutionary futility.[3][4]