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A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again

by David Foster Wallace

*Razor-sharp cultural commentary and hilarious social observation from the bestselling author of INFINITE JEST.

FORMAT
Paperback
CONDITION
Brand New


Publisher Description

A collection of insightful and uproariously funny non-fiction by the bestselling author of INFINITE JEST - one of the most acclaimed and adventurous writers of our time. A SUPPOSEDLY FUN THING... brings together Wallace's musings on a wide range of topics, from his early days as a nationally ranked tennis player to his trip on a commercial cruiseliner. In each of these essays, Wallace's observations are as keen as they are funny. Filled with hilarious details and invigorating analyses, these essays brilliantly expose the fault line in American culture - and once again reveal David Foster Wallace's extraordinary talent and gargantuan intellect.

Notes

A collection of essays on a variety of subjects, from tennis players to cruises, from the author of the fictional title Infinite Jest. "Animated by wonderfully exuberant prose" New York Times.

Author Biography

David Foster Wallace is the author of the novels THE BROOM OF THE SYSTEM (Abacus pb August 1997) and INFINITE JEST (L,B hb 1996, Abacus pb June 1997) and the short story collection GIRL WITH CURIOUS HAIR (Abacus pb November 1997)

Review

It's the kind of book you can't even put down while brushing your teeth. He's damn good. I take my hat off to him. - GUARDIANEnviably good. - SUNDAY TIMESLike sea air, David Foster Wallace is so bracing. - GLASGOW HERALDBrilliant. - MAXIM

Promotional

* Full-colour poster featuring backlist * Review and feature coverage in the national and style press * Selected bound proof mailing * Sales presenter

Kirkus US Review

This collection of essays by hot novelist Wallace (Infinite Jest, 1996, etc.) is sometimes tiresome but often truly rewarding. Wallace is a fine prose stylist of the post-Beat school. His long sentences overflow with prepositional phrases; commas are scarce. At his best - which is to say, about half the time here - Wallace writes with an intensity that transforms rambling reportage into a sui generis mode of weird philosophizing. He makes deft use of footnotes to pile up insights beneath the flow of his main line of thought. Especially brilliant is the collection's opening essay, in which Wallace looks back on his childhood experiences as a midwestern junior tennis star through the lens of his collegiate obsession with mathematics. The tennis world, treated at length in Infinite Jest, resurfaces in a sensitive profile of rising American player Michael Joyce. Otherwise, Wallace's best work comes in two pieces that originally appeared in Harper's: a ferocious investigative report on the culture of luxury cruises, and the record of another carnival voyage, this one a trip to the Illinois State Fair. A book review competently discusses literary-theoretical debates over the death-of-the-author thesis. Elsewhere in the volume, Wallace takes determined dives into banality. A more judicious, albeit less focused, effort finds Wallace on the set with filmmaker David Lynch, whom he presents as a contemporary artistic hero. A sprawling meditation on televison and contemporary fiction lays out many intriguing theories, but its main point, that TV irony snares rather than liberates viewers, doesn't make news. At his best, the exuberant Wallace amazes with his "Taoistic ability to control via noncontrol." But - to continue quoting from his opening tour-de-force, "Derivative Sport in Tornado Alley" - eschewing discipline exacts a price: "Force without law has no shape, only tendency and duration." (Kirkus Reviews)

Long Description

A collection of insightful and uproariously funny non-fiction by the bestselling author of INFINITE JEST - one of the most acclaimed and adventurous writers of our time. A SUPPOSEDLY FUN THING... brings together Wallace's musings on a wide range of topics, from his early days as a nationally ranked tennis player to his trip on a commercial cruiseliner. In each of these essays, Wallace's observations are as keen as they are funny. Filled with hilarious details and invigorating analyses, these essays brilliantly expose the fault line in American culture - and once again reveal David Foster Wallace's extraordinary talent and gargantuan intellect.

Review Quote

Like sea air, David Foster Wallace is so bracing.

Promotional "Headline"

*Razor-sharp cultural commentary and hilarious social observation from the bestselling author of INFINITE JEST.

Description for Sales People

Cult author of INFINITE JEST.

Details

ISBN0349110018
Author David Foster Wallace
Pages 368
Publisher Little, Brown Book Group
Year 1998
ISBN-10 0349110018
ISBN-13 9780349110011
Format Paperback
Publication Date 1998-02-05
Imprint Abacus
Place of Publication London
Country of Publication United Kingdom
DEWEY 813.54
Media Book
Birth 1962
Death 2008
Series Abacus
Short Title SUPPOSEDLY FUN THING ILL NEVER
Residence CA, US
UK Release Date 1998-02-05
Audience General
AU Release Date 1998-04-13
NZ Release Date 1998-04-13

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