Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again: Essays and Arguments by David Foster Wallace

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(Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: February 1998
  • 368pp
  • Sales Rank: 8,467
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    • Overview
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    • Meet the Writer
    • Features

    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: February 1998
    • Publisher: Little, Brown & Company
    • Format: Paperback, 368pp
    • Sales Rank: 8,467

    Synopsis

    A collection of stories from David Foster Wallace is occasion to celebrate. These stories — which have been prominently serialized in Harper's, Esquire, the Paris Review, and elsewhere — explore intensely immediate states of mind, with the attention to voice and the extraordinary creative daring that have won Wallace his reputation as one of the most talented fiction writer of his generation.Among the stories are "The Depressed Person", a dazzling portrayal of a woman's mental state; "Adult World", which reveals a woman's agonized consideration of her confusing sexual relationship with her husband; and "Brief Interviews with Hideous Men", a dark, hilarious series of portraits of men whose fear of women renders them grotesque.

    Annotation

    The author of Infinite Jest and Girl with Curious Hair turns his fierce curiosity and sharp, ironic sense of humor to nonfiction in his collection of musings on a wide range of topics, including the meaning of state fairs. 320 pp. Author readings. Print ads. 25,000 print.

    Publishers Weekly

    Like the tennis champs who fascinate him, novelist Wallace (Infinite Jest; The Broom of the System) makes what he does look effortless and yet inspired. His instinct for the colloquial puts his masters Pynchon and DeLillo to shame, and the humane sobriety that he brings to his subjects-fictional or factual-should serve as a model to anyone writing cultural comment, whether it takes the form of stories or of essays like these. Readers of Wallace's fiction will take special interest in this collection: critics have already mined "Derivative Sport in Tornado Alley" (Wallace's memoir of his tennis-playing days) for the biographical sources of Infinite Jest. The witty, insightful essays on David Lynch and TV are a reminder of how thoroughly Wallace has internalized the writing-and thinking-habits of Stanley Cavell, the plain-language philosopher at Harvard, Wallace's alma mater. The reportage (on the Illinois State Fair, the Canadian Open and a Caribbean Cruise) is perhaps best described as post-gonzo: funny, slight and self-conscious without Norman Mailer's or Hunter Thompson's braggadocio. Only in the more academic essays, on Dostoyevski and the scholar H.L. Hix, does Wallace's gee-whiz modesty get in the way of his arguments. Still, even these have their moments: at the end of the Dostoyevski essay, Wallace blurts out that he wants "passionately serious ideological contemporary fiction [that is] also ingenious and radiantly transcendent fiction." From most writers, that would be hot air; from one as honest, subtle and ambitious as Wallace, it has the sound of a promise. (Feb.)

    More Reviews and Recommendations

    Biography

    Best known as the author of the audacious, shelf-bending postmodern masterpiece Infinite Jest, novelist, essayist, and short story writer David Foster Wallace (1962-2008) was one of the most influential writers of the late 20th century.

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    Customer Reviews

    • Reader Rating:
    • Ratings: 9Reviews: 2

    Amazing in a simple wayby Anonymous

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    March 13, 2003: I enjoyed A Supposedly Fun Thing so much that I have been recommending it to many people. That doesn't happen often; I am usually bored by essays because they are usually so self-conciously written. But Wallace writes like he's taking a risk at revealing what he really thinks; he seems genuinely in awe of the age in which he lives, and can't seem to believe it's happening to him even while it's happening (the cruise ship story). I'm glad I did not read Mr. Wallace's other works before this collection of essays. I'm not sure I will; from the reviews it seems that he has not grown into fiction and that using his words to reflect the modern world is hi

    satire rules the modern worldby Anonymous

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    January 22, 2000: This title once again shows that Mr. Wallace is one of the premier quthors of modern fiction. The great thing about this book is that it isn't fiction. It is about the human psyche and how perception is played out in many feilds of interaction and display. If you found Infinite Jest to be humorous than imigine if it were a true story of social distress. That is what this book is presenting. Don't let the word essay scare you, this is not dull reading.