The section "The White Album" in Didion's book deals with narrative and story telling. Didion tussles over what happens when a story is left unfinished and when the narrative doesn't make sense. By telling many different mini-narratives, most of which have no clear ending or satisfactory resolution, she emphasizes the fact that we cannot control life, or even properly document its happenings. Several of the people and scenarios she introduces (Linda Kasabian, the Ferguson brothers, Jim Morrison) recur throughout the section, although when first mentioned they do not strike the reader as particularly notable. This underscores the unpredictability of Didion's narrative, which is in a sense mirroring the way events randomly occur in real life. She starts off the section saying, "We tell ourselves stories in order to live" (11) and ends with "but writing has not yet helped me to see what it means." (48) This section is as much about the process of writing as it is about the raw material of people and events the writer has to work with.