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Blonde: A Novel Paperback – April 14, 2020

4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 1,747 ratings

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The National Book Award finalist and national bestseller exploring the life and legend of Marilyn Monroe

Now a Netflix Film starring Ana de Armas, Adrien Brody, Bobby Cannavale and Julianne Nicholson

In one of her most ambitious works, Joyce Carol Oates boldly reimagines the inner, poetic, and spiritual life of Norma Jeane Baker—the child, the woman, the fated celebrity, and idolized blonde the world came to know as Marilyn Monroe. In a voice startlingly intimate and rich, Norma Jeane tells her own story of an emblematic American artist—intensely conflicted and driven—who had lost her way. A powerful portrait of Hollywood’s myth and an extraordinary woman’s heartbreaking reality, Blonde is a sweeping epic that pays tribute to the elusive magic and devastation behind the creation of the great 20th-century American star. 

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Editorial Reviews

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“Grimly compelling. . . . a portrait of Hollywood as terrifyingly hallucinatory as Nathaniel West’s The Day of the Locust.” — Wall Street Journal

“In Blonde, Oates has found a character and a narrative mode that exploit all her strengths as a writer . . . a narrative intensity often found in her stories but never sustained so successfully in a long novel and an exuberant mastery of language that suggests a writer at the peak of her power.” — Atlanta Journal-Constitution

“A fascinating imagining of the hellish battles that Monroe fought with herself.” — Playboy

“Joyce Carol Oates’ scary and rhapsodic novel about the life of Marilyn Monroe is saturated with the mysteries of eye and camera. . . . It’s eccentric, exhausting—and remarkable.” — Salon.com

“An overwhelmingly vivid and powerful rendering of a human being who outlived her life.” — The Nation

“Oates may have created the most important novel of her career.” — Newsday

“Ms. Oates has hit another one of her targets. This vengeful history is about the majesty of imagination. Marilyn’s self-imaginings were cruelly curtaied. Come now the artist to accord Marilyn her rightful status, as artist. The artist uses flesh and fact, the artist transcends them.” — New York Observer

Blonde is a true mythic blowout, in which Marilyn is everything and nothing--a Great White Whale of significance, standing not for the blind power of nature but for the blind power of artifice.” — GQ

“Joyce Carol Oates takes the boldest path to comprehending ‘the riddle, the curse of Monroe’ by proceeding directly and frankly to fiction. Her novel Blonde is fat, messy and fierce. It’s part Gothic, part kaleidoscopic novel of ideas, part lurid celebrity potboiler, and is seldom less than engrossing.” — New York Times

“In Oates’ corpus, Blonde lands near the top. It is an ambitions, complex, and powerful novel.” — Greensboro News & Record

“If you are prejudiced against biographical fiction... or if you simply think that there are too many books about Marilyn Monroe... now is the time to lay aside your prejudices--or, rather, to allow them to be swept aside by a torrentially imaginative, compulsively readable tour de force... Blonde brings this near mythic tale triumphantly and terribly to psychological life.” — Sunday Telegraph

“Joyce Carol Oates’ precise and inspired writing is close to witchcraft. With mastery, she unravels the story of the mythical blonde, the overly adored and despised Marilyn Monroe. Breathlessly, I followed the intricate and passionate emotions surrounding the sweet and complex Norma Jeane, whose blazing ‘aura’ suffused the whole world and frightened the men who loved her most.” — Jeanne Moreau

“Oates is as diverse as she is driven. She has tackled topics ranging from the aesthetics of boxing to the misadventures of toxic twins. But rarely is she so intriguing as when she strays into a genre best described as ‘faction.’ It’s as unsettling as it is worthwhile to take a fresh look at a much-publicized event or personality through Oates’ eyes.” — Times Literary Supplement (London)

About the Author

Joyce Carol Oates is a recipient of the National Medal of Humanities, the National Book Critics Circle Ivan Sandrof Lifetime Achievement Award, the National Book Award, and the 2019 Jerusalem Prize, and has been several times nominated for the Pulitzer Prize. She has written some of the most enduring fiction of our time, including the national bestsellers We Were the Mulvaneys; Blonde, which was nominated for the National Book Award; and the New York Times bestseller The Falls, which won the 2005 Prix Femina. She is the Roger S. Berlind Distinguished Professor of the Humanities at Princeton University and has been a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters since 1978.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Ecco; Anniversary edition (April 14, 2020)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 768 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0062968459
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0062968456
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.6 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6 x 1.92 x 9 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars 1,747 ratings

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Joyce Carol Oates
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Joyce Carol Oates is the author of more than 70 books, including novels, short story collections, poetry volumes, plays, essays, and criticism, including the national bestsellers We Were the Mulvaneys and Blonde. Among her many honors are the PEN/Malamud Award for Excellence in Short Fiction and the National Book Award. Oates is the Roger S. Berlind Distinguished Professor of the Humanities at Princeton University, and has been a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters since 1978.

Customer reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
1,747 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find the book engaging and well-written. They appreciate the blend of fact and fiction, with great storytelling and vivid imagery. The writing quality is praised as wonderful and detailed. Readers find the insight fascinating and interesting. Opinions differ on the pacing and length, with some finding it captivating and entertaining, while others feel it's repetitive. There are mixed feelings about the sadness in the story, with some finding it joyful and others feeling it's sad and sensitive.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

66 customers mention "Readability"66 positive0 negative

Customers find the book readable and engaging. They describe it as an artful work of literature with poetic, surreal, horrific, and psychological elements. Many consider it a good study paperback and enjoy the interesting subject matter.

"...She paved the way for generations of talented, beautiful actresses to practice their craft without having to sacrifice themselves to the creepy,..." Read more

"I love the book cover, the story, the condition of the book...." Read more

"Joyce Carol Oates hits home with this book. In detail that is at times “too much” that you need to step away from it. To let the feelings sink in." Read more

"...A brilliant story from a most brilliant writer" Read more

44 customers mention "Fiction"39 positive5 negative

Customers enjoy the book's blend of fact and fiction. They find the storytelling engaging, with vivid imagery and a surreal story. The novel is described as realistic historical fiction, based on facts about her life. While some of the specific incidents and characters are fictional, many concepts seem believable and well-imagined.

"I love the book cover, the story, the condition of the book...." Read more

"...A brilliant story from a most brilliant writer" Read more

"...There is a clear disclaimer that it is fictional, and when Oates apparently said that she felt Norma Jeane "guiding her hand," I think she..." Read more

"...It definitely has enough real elements that are known about her life, but unless you have really read about her or seen documentaries about her life..." Read more

30 customers mention "Writing quality"26 positive4 negative

Customers find the book well-written and narrated. They appreciate the vivid descriptions of Marilyn Monroe's life and Hollywood in the book. The writing sparkles on every page, making it an engaging read from beginning to end.

"...The book is an easy, straightforward read from beginning to end, and it details her constant battles with the studio bigshots who unsuccessfully..." Read more

"I thought this novel was bold and audacious, and I have seen a lot of negative reviews on this for taking on the life of a real person, but I think..." Read more

"...for me, but Oates' insights into the human condition and her winding prose held me to the very end of this 700 + page book...." Read more

"...Didn't expect that. But it is a very readable imagining of Marilyn Monroe's life...." Read more

15 customers mention "Insight"15 positive0 negative

Customers enjoy the book's insight, craftsmanship, and characterization. They find the writing engaging, entertaining, and informative. The book presents a multi-faceted depth and possibility of a fragile woman.

"...Monroe,' and then tells her story with great imagination and psychological insight...." Read more

"...is everything, and that only her incredible vivacity, her amazing diaphanous existence and her incredible empathetic role assumption makes Monroe..." Read more

"A long, fascinating, and unrelenting dark trip through a fictionalized take on the rise and demise of Norma Jeane Baker, better known as superstar..." Read more

"...This book presented a many faceted depth and possibility of a fragile woman/girl...Norma Jean...." Read more

27 customers mention "Pacing"10 positive17 negative

Customers have mixed reviews about the pacing of the book. Some find it engaging and entertaining, while others feel it's repetitive and boring.

"...Unusually fussy writing from Oates and unending, unpleasant, gratuitous sex scenes made it impossible for me to read the last quarter of the..." Read more

"A long, fascinating, and unrelenting dark trip through a fictionalized take on the rise and demise of Norma Jeane Baker, better known as superstar..." Read more

"...the fog in which her character lived, but this is often disconcerting for the reader...." Read more

"...Her overused long rambling tangents into Marilyn's confused mind wore me down. I forged on to finish the book, but it was 300 pages too long for me." Read more

22 customers mention "Length"7 positive15 negative

Customers have different views on the book's length. Some find it amazing, epic, and fascinating with a monumental arc. Others feel it's too long, with small print and excessive sex scenes.

"...The book is very long, about 730 pages, and is not always the easiest read...." Read more

"...The book is quite long but I got totally immersed in it. I wish I had not spent so much time on it now that I know it was not at all accurate." Read more

"...icon that was 'Marilyn Monroe,' and then tells her story with great imagination and psychological insight...." Read more

"...Unusually fussy writing from Oates and unending, unpleasant, gratuitous sex scenes made it impossible for me to read the last quarter of the..." Read more

20 customers mention "Sadness"13 positive7 negative

Customers have different views on the book's sadness. Some find it emotional and riveting, evoking sympathy and pity for the sensitive woman. Others describe it as depressing and distressing.

"...This is probably the most sympathetic book written about Monroe (though Gloria Steinem’s is also quite worthwhile), and treats the object like a..." Read more

"...It wrenched my heart and more than anything has evoked sympathy and pity and has me counting my blessings as a regular woman...." Read more

"...The only reason I did not give the book 5 stars is because it is very sad (of course, it is a sad story) but this is an absolutely incredible work..." Read more

"Title pretty much says it all. MM is a tragic story. I know this is a fictional account but likely pretty accurate...." Read more

10 customers mention "Personality"6 positive4 negative

Customers have different views on the character. Some find her fascinating and human, easily recognizable as a living personality. They appreciate insights into Monroe's psychology, body, and American life. Others feel she depicts a more complex and troubled personality than was known to the general public.

"...as an archetypical character, each different, each easily recognizable as a living personality...." Read more

"...I was fascinated by the book, but I was both saddened and repulsed by the main character...." Read more

"...At times there are insights and epiphanies about Monroe’s psychology, her body, and American life that make this book a rewarding experience to read..." Read more

"...It is a disgusting and disgraceful glimpse at a fictional character who slightly resembles Marilyn Monroe...." Read more

Original arrived destroyed
4 out of 5 stars
Original arrived destroyed
Speaking on the product only: my initial copy arrived practically destroyed. The spine looked to be chewed on and the pages were crumpled as if there were water damage. I did not purchase used therefore I did not expect such a horrendous quality.Thankfully, Amazon made it right…the replacement copy was in a much better condition than the original.Excited to enjoy this piece of work. A fictional spin on an icon that we “think” we “know” , sounds like an enthralling journey.
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on December 5, 2021
    Americans have long had a love affair with our original sexy blonde icon, Marilyn Monroe. Even Billie Eilish these days is channeling Marilyn. After her untimely death in 1962, interest in Marilyn's story peaked again in 1974 when her unfinished autobiography, My Story, was published. The book is an easy, straightforward read from beginning to end, and it details her constant battles with the studio bigshots who unsuccessfully kept trying to get her into bed with them. She called them all “wolves.”

    Joyce Carol Oates writes the fictional biography, Blonde (2000), in which JCO exhaustively researches the person Norma Jeane Baker and the icon that was 'Marilyn Monroe,' and then tells her story with great imagination and psychological insight. The underlying question in Blonde, and on all the minds of those of us who are obsessed with 'Marilyn Monroe,' is why do Americans still love this busty, flirty woman with the breathy voice and voluptuous hips? Norma Jeane as 'Marilyn' created her own style of stardom, and her movies showcased her casually flaunted sexuality with her seeming inattention to the uproar she created simply by walking onto the movie set. Bus Stop (1956), Some Like It Hot (1958), Let’s Make Love (1960), with Yves Montand, her co-star and apparently at the time her lover, and her last movie The Misfits (1961), filmed while her marriage to Arthur Miller was breaking up, are probably her most famous. She was ambitious and her movie characters prominently displayed that ambition. Michelle Williams was great as Marilyn opposite Kenneth Branaugh in My Week with Marilyn (2011). I'm looking forward to Ana de Armas as Marilyn in the screenplay of JCO's Blonde (not out yet as I write this.) (P.S. It's out now on Netflix, and Ana de Armas is spectacular as Norma Jean's 'Marilyn Monroe').

    JCO masterfully reveals the innate skill 'Norma Jean' brought to each of "Marilyn Monroe's" movie characters, showing how she inhabited her specific role as an archetypical character, each different, each easily recognizable as a living personality. JCO also reveals the inner character of each of Norma Jean's three husbands, the clueless young buck, the brutal ex-athlete, and the self-conscious intellectual. All eventually mistreated her.

    JCO's Norma Jean's slow descent into grave abuse of prescription drugs (amphetamines, barbiturates, tranquilizers) and alcohol didn't help matters any, as she began to suffer from insomnia, memory loss, lethargy, lack of mental focus. Indeed, the Studio provided easy access to their Dr. FeelGood for prescriptions, which Norma Jean (and other Studio actors) relied upon to manage the stress and anxiety they experienced when filming. Our pop icons of the 1950's paid a heavy price with eventual loss of their health from addiction to pills and alcohol: Elvis, Brando, Johnny Cash, Ray Charles, and others in addition to Norma Jeane's 'Marilyn Monroe.'

    In her Author's Note introduction to Blonde written just before 2000, JCO characterizes her monumental work of fiction as 'synecdoche'--the specific for the general--clearly meant among other things to reference the experience 'Norma Jean' had with the Studio system and its horrible sexual exploitation of the young, pretty women who aspired to be in the movies by the men holding absolute power over them. JCO anticipates the MeToo Movement and the Harvey Weinstein revelations by well more than a decade. There are very graphic scenes in the novel of such exploitation (among others, a particular scene with "Mr. Z," and we all know who she is referencing) and the acquiescence of others, including older women, who have positions in the Studio system. They all knew, but no one blew the whistle. At the time, the only way to overcome this institutional exploitation was to become such a popular star in her own right that the Studio had to bend to her will. That, indeed, was what Norma Jeane accomplished. She paved the way for generations of talented, beautiful actresses to practice their craft without having to sacrifice themselves to the creepy, pathetic lust of the powerful Studio executives.
    29 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on September 27, 2024
    I love the book cover, the story, the condition of the book. The only problem I have is the seller covering up the ISBN barcode with their own stores barcode. I use an app that scans the ISBN code to keep track of my collection and now I have to remove the stores label and the leftover residue. Other than a cheap sticker it’s perfect.
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on January 10, 2025
    Joyce Carol Oates hits home with this book. In detail that is at times “too much” that you need to step away from it. To let the feelings sink in.
  • Reviewed in the United States on November 22, 2024
    Her life and the situations she fell into only
    Add up to an agonizing telling of the tragedy
    She endured. It makes me weep for the storms my daughters and sisters and granddaughters must face in life as women. A brilliant story from a most brilliant writer
  • Reviewed in the United States on November 12, 2022
    This book is one of the most ambitious I think I’ve ever read. In it, Joyce Carol Oates seeks to take the idea and biography of Marilyn Monroe and turn it into an epic. It seems like a great idea - the story of the actress spans the middle third of the twentieth century and plays out in Hollywood and New York. Among the themes invoked: gender, femininity, the movies (“the American religion”), power, the Studio system, the male gaze, fatherlessness, love, belonging, self-invention, I could go on. The book does have a monumental arc, it has a monumental length, but that length is not justified but what’s inside. At times there are insights and epiphanies about Monroe’s psychology, her body, and American life that make this book a rewarding experience to read, but it also goes on at length without using that length wisely.

    This is probably the most sympathetic book written about Monroe (though Gloria Steinem’s is also quite worthwhile), and treats the object like a subject in a way that brings fresh insight to her life and character. I only wish that the tremendous length was made to be worth it by an accompanying epic story or epic emotional journey.
    7 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on August 6, 2014
    I thought this novel was bold and audacious, and I have seen a lot of negative reviews on this for taking on the life of a real person, but I think that's what the historical fiction genre dares to do. This book does not claim to be fact, despite what some disgruntled readers might say. There is a clear disclaimer that it is fictional, and when Oates apparently said that she felt Norma Jeane "guiding her hand," I think she simply meant that she became so obsessed with the project that she felt she was inside of Norma Jeane instead of Norma Jeane being a separate character from herself.

    As for the writing style, which some reviewers have called "sloppy," those portions are called stream of consciousness, and it's a very effective technique for this story. At times, Norma Jeane's thoughts are disjointed, whether it's from the state of her mental health or from drug/alcohol use, and the stream of consciousness style really creates that disjointed effect really well. As for the "bad poetry," to a certain extent, it should be bad because Norma Jeane wasn't a world-renowned poet, and it was Norma Jeane, the character, writing those poems, not Oates. However, I would disagree that all of it is bad. While much of it is fragmented, there are some poignant lines/images that stuck with me.

    I think with historical fiction, there will always be the question of authorial license, libel, etc., but I don't think that what Oates has done here is anything she should be reprimanded for. I think she has done her research on a person and then went deeper and deeper inside to create a fictional character, an imagined inside life of someone so vastly famous that we forget she is a person. And I think that's important.
    103 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • ZwillingG
    5.0 out of 5 stars MARILYN vs Norma Jean
    Reviewed in Germany on August 30, 2024
    Man entwickelt ein Verständnis für die ROLLE, die MM annahm und den verschiedenen Gründen für diese Selbstverleugnung. Man weiß, wie es endet und hofft, dass es gut ausgeht. Fesselnd geschrieben, konnte das Buch kaum aus der Hand legen.
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  • Ranjit Kulkarni
    3.0 out of 5 stars Painstaking reading
    Reviewed in India on November 8, 2022
    I tried my best to finish this but it is just too painstaking to finish. Clearly focused on Monroe and the troubles Norma Jean went through to become Marilyn, it gets into so much detail and gets a bit gross at times that I could not get to the end. Maybe for others who love these type of long character life stories, but this book wasn't for me!
  • Steve Griffin
    5.0 out of 5 stars Epic reimagining of Marilyn Monroe's life in an age of misogyny and exploitation
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 15, 2022
    I’m a fan of Joyce Carol Oates, a writer whose ability to write dark literature and fantastical horror makes her perfect for this reimagining of Marilyn Monroe’s life. The book is long but never boring. Monroe is conceived as a true artist, absorbed by the meaning of life. Her striving for higher connection becomes a spur to her acting. In this, she is far more perspicacious than her male co-stars, who are mostly intent on technique and their next sexual conquest. Monroe’s drive for a bigger vision, for love and for motherhood, leaves her confused by the media’s relentless focus on the trivia of her life. She increasingly seeks solace in drugs as the weight of her exploitation by men and The Studio – and the neglect of her mother and absent father – bear down on her. Her fame eventually puts her into contact with the top echelons of American society, where she is violently and tragically abused. The ending leaves you in tears – although it’s worth knowing that this is almost certainly not how she died. Chilling, brilliant, recommended.
  • Amazon Customer
    5.0 out of 5 stars No existe traducción en español.
    Reviewed in Mexico on March 6, 2019
    Magnífica novela sobre aspectos de la vida de Marylin Monroe.
  • CM
    5.0 out of 5 stars Um perfil psicológico de Norma Jeane
    Reviewed in Brazil on July 4, 2017
    Blonde não é uma biografia de Marilyn Monroe; por meio de ficção, a autora traça o perfil psicológico de Norma Jeane enquanto percorremos os acontecimentos que tiveram mais impacto em sua mente e fizeram dela a mulher sensível, talentosa, insegura e autodestrutiva escondida por trás da imagem de Marilyn Monroe. Apesar de longo, o livro é fascinante e muito bem escrito. Recomendo.