Diane Johnson
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- In full:
- Diane Lain Johnson Murray
- Also Known As:
- Diane Lain Johnson Murray
Diane Johnson (born April 28, 1934, Moline, Illinois, U.S.) is an American writer and academic who first garnered attention for worldly and satiric novels set in California that portrayed contemporary women in crisis. She later wrote a series of books about Americans living abroad.
Johnson was educated at Stephens College, Columbia, Missouri; the University of Utah, Salt Lake City (B.A., 1957); and the University of California (M.A., 1966; Ph.D., 1968). From 1968 through 1987 she was a professor of English at the University of California, Davis.
The heroine of Johnson’s first novel, Fair Game (1965), conscious of having been exploited by a series of lovers, eventually finds a man who will foster her desire to grow into a more complete person. In Loving Hands at Home (1968) a woman leaves her Mormon husband and his family, with whom she feels no spiritual kinship, but fails to succeed on her own in the wider world. Burning (1971) satirizes the southern California way of life. The Shadow Knows (1974) concerns a divorced mother whose secure life is shattered when she becomes convinced that she is marked for violence. In Lying Low (1978), Johnson chronicled four days in the lives of three markedly different women.
Johnson departed from her previous novels with Persian Nights (1987), about an American woman who ends up discovering herself during a trip to Iran shortly before the country’s revolution. After Health and Happiness (1990), which centres on a San Francisco hospital, Johnson wrote several comedies of manners concerning American women in France: Le Divorce (1997; film 2003), Le Mariage (2000), and L’Affaire (2003). She continued to explore the clash of cultures with Lulu in Marrakech (2008), which is set in Morocco. In Lorna Mott Comes Home (2021), a woman returns to the United States after living in France for a number of years.
Johnson wrote a well-received novelistic biography of writer George Meredith’s first wife, The True History of the First Mrs. Meredith and Other Lesser Lives (1972), and the biography Dashiell Hammett: A Life (1983). She also wrote screenplays, including The Shining (1980; with Stanley Kubrick); a collection of essays, Terrorists and Novelists (1982); and Into a Paris Quartier (2005), about Paris’s Saint-Germain-des-Prés neighbourhood. The memoir Flyover Lives was published in 2014.