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The Uptown Local: Joy, Death, and Joan Didion: A Memoir

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A brilliant debut memoir about a young writer—struggling with depression, family issues, and addiction—and his life-changing decade working for Joan Didion.

As an aspiring novelist in his early twenties, Cory Leadbeater was presented with an opportunity to work for a well-known writer whose identity was kept confidential. Since the tumultuous days of childhood, Cory had sought refuge from the rougher parts of life in the pages of books. Suddenly, he found himself the personal assistant to a titan of literature: Joan Didion.

In the nine years that followed, Cory shared Joan’s rarefied world, transformed not only by her blazing intellect but by her generous friendship and mentorship. Together they recited poetry in the mornings, dined with Supreme Court justices, attended art openings, smoked a single cigarette before bed.

But secretly, Cory was spiraling. He reeled from the death of a close friend. He spent his weekends at a federal prison, visiting his father as he served time for fraud. He struggled day after day to write the novel that would validate him as a real writer. And meanwhile, the forces of addiction and depression loomed large.

In hypnotic prose that pulses with life and longing, The Uptown Local explores the fault lines of class, family, loss, and creativity. It is a love letter to a cultural icon—and a moving testament to the relationships that sustain us in the eternal pursuit of a life worth living.

224 pages, Hardcover

First published June 11, 2024

About the author

Cory Leadbeater

2 books21 followers

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5 stars
67 (48%)
4 stars
28 (20%)
3 stars
28 (20%)
2 stars
10 (7%)
1 star
6 (4%)
Displaying 1 - 29 of 29 reviews
Profile Image for kimberly.
467 reviews315 followers
June 12, 2024
The Uptown Local: Joy, Death, and Joan Didion.

While there is certainly much more death than there is joy in this memoir, there are glimmers if you are looking. This book is a heart-touching ode to the late, beloved Joan Didion as well as a fiercely honest look at Leadbeater's life. In just over 200 pages, Leadbeater somehow managed to make me laugh, cry, contemplate, reflect, and smile in awe and wonder. Suicide is discussed heavily within these pages which may be triggering to some but for others, I believe that it can bring about a better understanding of someone suffering.
Profile Image for Kerrysue.
85 reviews4 followers
May 27, 2024
When I read books like this, I wish I were I writer instead of exclusively a reader. I could write a review that people would read and really understand how I felt as I was reading it. I identified with so much in this book that it makes my chest compress with emotion. I still haven’t found my Joan, my orange tulips. My shoelaces are untied a little more often than I care for.

This is a beautiful, poetic, powerful, personal memoir about real people. It was intrinsically enjoyable and sometimes painfully intrusive to read. Absolutely worth the pain.
Profile Image for Ryan.
1,125 reviews40 followers
July 5, 2024
Uninteresting, nothing-burger of a memoir written in a flighty and long-winded style in dire need of tightening.
Profile Image for Star Gater.
1,520 reviews53 followers
June 28, 2024
GoodReads Giveaway physical book win.

Genre: Memoir (?)

I was confused throughout the book. I still don't know what the author's purpose was or what he wanted to convey.

Two stars -- I feel like the genre memoir is misrepresented as well as sadly (and do hope I'm wrong) Joan Didion.
Profile Image for Amy Kaufman.
Author 1 book91 followers
June 21, 2024
I'm so annoyed I read this. I kept telling myself it was short, that it would be over soon. It felt interminable. I selected it, of course, hoping for Didion insights. That was naive. By the end, I just found myself desperate to know what her reaction would have been to this memoir.
Profile Image for Lissa00.
1,306 reviews26 followers
March 27, 2024
Cory Leadbeater was Joan Didion’s assistant/companion during the final years of her life. I was somewhat nervous going into the book. While I am not a Didion completist, I did not want to see her exploited by someone she employed and trusted. I had no need to be nervous. The Didion of this book is a gentle, grieving, wise and elderly presence. Cory suffered from personal and familial trauma and his position in Didion’s house was a comforting aspect of his often tumultuous life. This memoir also happens to fall during the years of COVID and the Trump presidency and it was interesting reading about those events from his perspective. I did feel that it was meandering and not always coherent, but overall this will (and should be) a popular memoir about a relationship with an iconic author. I received a digital copy of this book from the publisher via NetGalley.
Profile Image for Gabriella Burnham.
Author 2 books130 followers
February 12, 2024
Come for Joan Didion, stay for the searing meditations on life in America. I couldn't put this book down. In fact, I read 90% in one night, woke up still thinking about it, and finished before brushing my teeth. The Uptown Local is a masterful examination of the emotional and material conditions of our time.
4 reviews
May 15, 2024
This is an emotionally moving story from Cory Leadbetter about his chaotic life, and that of his friend Joan Didion. Cory accepted a career of being Joan Didions protege, and taking care of her , an esteemed author in her old age. This book is a riveting testimony about their lives together, and the special friendship that develops between them. Full of love and raw emotion, this book is recommended to people of all ages.
Profile Image for Elizabeth Edwards.
5,431 reviews9 followers
March 3, 2024
comes out June 11, 2024. i won this in a Goodreads giveaway. books & reading literary criticism. general books & reading. biographies & memoirs of authors. i often wonder how you can review something like this in ...it wasn't your life, you are reading some1 else's experiences and how they were treat, lived, etc ...so i mean say it has me curious and how it would all happen, etc.
i love the book cover. plain, simple ...floral. our lives and the daily experiences shape us and make us grow ...but it for the good, bad or ugly. LOL!!
25 reviews6 followers
June 17, 2024
Now here's a fucking book. There are a thousand things this book could have been, and the one we got is frankly a miracle. As lucky as Joan was to find Cory and Cory to find Joan, we're lucky that the person closest to her has his own story to tell.

It is also to our great fortune that Cory can't stay inside himself, and this is the piece that makes the book so beautiful: he feels his pain as internal, his narrative voice and persona want to turn inward, the voice and his mind want to spend time on the page, with his characters and his pain and his own narrativization of it, to keep touching the hot poker, but the irresistible part of the book (and his life as described in it) is that he can't. His instincts drag the gaze back outward at every moment. His story is not his own — it is the story of his relationships to others. His chapters are full of people who are not Joan and not him and also not his family. He writes about everyone, Joan and himself too, with the loving clarity and honesty that only a loving and honest person could.

It is not a book about Joan, or Cory, or even depression and death, it is a book about living, which is to say you can fly through 200 pages of The Uptown Local and get *more* than most books pack into twice the heft. That's literature, baby.
1 review1 follower
June 15, 2024
This stunning debut memoir from Cory Leadbeater is so much more than a glimpse into the life of Joan Didion. It is a rich, inventive and highly lyrical examination of life in America, of what it takes to get ahead, of ceaseless grief and overwhelming obsession. However, most spectacular of all, is Leadbeater’s examination of Self and how all these other considerations coalesced and collided in a life that—unimaginably (even for him)— unfolded side-by-side with Didion’s for a decade.

Of course it is also a gorgeous and fitting tribute to Didion’s colossal literary gifts and her extraordinary tenderness, but what makes this a thing of lasting beauty and serious literary importance, is Leadbeater’s own teeming brain and talent.

Didion fans will have many reasons to love it, but this is, just simply, a fantastic book for thinking and feeling people.

Profile Image for Tasha.
856 reviews
June 19, 2024
I zipped through this memoir and it’s beautifully written, albeit very hard in parts as the writer struggles with suicidal ideation. It feels unfair of me to say I wish there was more Joan Didion—it is a memoir, after all—but I wish there was more Joan, in that the ending felt a little like the author had a (justifiable) axe to grind about class differences but wasn’t willing to actually grind it because he didn’t feel it with his employer, only some of her friends, and I wish that had been explored in more depth rather than superficially.
Profile Image for Karen Watson .
7 reviews
April 5, 2024
In a way, I related to Cory while reading this, due to the fact that I felt awkwardly out of place. The names and places were all very unfamiliar to me, which made it hard for me to connect. However, I always find it interesting looking into someone else's life as they voluntarily share their innermost secrets. Cory has experienced many things that I never have or never will. I'm both thankful and envious of that fact.

I won this book on a Goodreads Giveaway.
Profile Image for M Flores.
95 reviews1 follower
Read
June 30, 2024
The debut of writer Cory Leadbeater intrigued me due to the title & cover, and that it's a memoir. I wasn't disappointed, nor did I go in with any intentions, which may have worked in my favor. Emotional medium paced read.

Thank you to Ecco/Harper Collins for the ARC. It was my pleasure to read this one.
Profile Image for JANE DUBOSE.
18 reviews
July 3, 2024
Parts of this memoir were stunning - beautifully written and startling in their elegance. But the pacing, storyline, chronology were distracting and could not keep me engaged. And perhaps the memoir focus was too weak after all - though Joan Didion is well known and Leadbeater had difficult times, they were not amazing enough to hold my interest.
Profile Image for Pamela Beckford.
Author 4 books21 followers
February 2, 2024
A memoir of a man who has had many struggles - father in prison, best friend died suddenly and a desire to be a part of a different class of people than his upbringing had prepared him for. Through his struggles he has a very bright light in working with Joan Didion for years.

The writing in this book was so well done - you could tell that Leadbetter agonized over all the word choices in order to find just the most precise word. But I found this book rather depressing. His life has been a dark one and it came through in the book. There was one very enlightening chapter describing the feelings of being suicidal.

Joy, Death and Joan Didion - I just didn't feel much joy while reading this memoir. Death was a prominent theme and not as much on Joan Didion as I would have like to have read. Joan was definitely a mentor and supporter but her influence was just not as in depth as I would have wanted.

The book was a worthwhile book to learn more about the inner workings of depression and suicide and for the prose.

Thank you to NetGalley for the ARC in exchange for my fair and honest opinion.
Profile Image for Barbara Hall.
211 reviews8 followers
June 19, 2024
So interesting to be a "fly on the wall" in reading about some of Joan Didion's personal and daily details. Otherwise, this was an earnest but not especially fascinating memoir from Didion's personal assistant.
Profile Image for Michael.
335 reviews3 followers
June 23, 2024
Didion's presence is liminal, so much so that including her name in the subtitle feels strictly like a marketing strategy. Leadbeater is a gifted writer and very honest, and yet there's something aloof about the whole work.
12 reviews
April 22, 2024
Thank you for the Goodreads giveaway.

I find it hard to review a book on somebody's life.
I could relate to some of the same experiences the author faced.
I would recommend reading this memoir.
180 reviews8 followers
May 31, 2024
This is an interesting and insightful book. Life lessons are so hard. Well written.
1 review
June 15, 2024
A brutally honest meditation on class, family, mental health, and the struggles of elevating yourself from humble beginnings into the life you aspired to (and what that truly costs).
Profile Image for Wallis.
154 reviews
June 16, 2024
Each individual segment was great; some were absolutely beautiful. But the transitions left the whole book feeling incoherent, choppy, and hard to follow.
Profile Image for Nation  Hahn.
25 reviews9 followers
July 5, 2024
A lovely meditation on Didion, but mostly a lovely reflection on life, ambition, family, friends, and loss.
June 30, 2024
I won this book on a Goodreads giveaway. The author of the book was a personal assistant to Joan Didion. It mostly is his story as he navigates his job and life. He struggles to fit in at work while dealing with family and friend issues. Surprisingly well written and I came to care about this young man and his life.
Displaying 1 - 29 of 29 reviews

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