Jonathan Franzen on David Foster Wallace
"It was still hard not to feel wounded by the part of him that had chose the adulation of strangers over the love of the people closest to him."
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"It was still hard not to feel wounded by the part of him that had chose the adulation of strangers over the love of the people closest to him."
"It's sloppy at times, inconsistent in others, baggy here, too-lean there ... [but] the book is unmistakably a David Foster Wallace affair."
The video phone: just a fad?
Says Sam Anderson: "I could go on forever, but I'll stop there. In conclusion: It’s all tremendously complicated."
On "Wallace’s fullest elaboration of what he saw as the key question of modern existence."
'Infinite Jest' has been released as an app for the iPad, iPhone, and iPod Touch with "enriched footnote capability."
Our book critic is of two minds about an epic 'New Yorker' article on the life and death of David Foster Wallace.
A former student has posted the syllabus from his 2005 Pomona College Literary Interpretation class.