maybe they meant six figures, including decimal places
― still counting on porcupine racetrack (G00blar), Monday, 22 June 2009 15:20 (fourteen years ago) link
max's new yorker article
damn son
― FREE DOM AND ETHAN (special guest stars mark bronson), Monday, 22 June 2009 15:22 (fourteen years ago) link
ha.
i wonder what the d.t. in d.t. max stands for.
― us_odd_bunny_lady (tipsy mothra), Monday, 22 June 2009 16:19 (fourteen years ago) link
david tosser
― still counting on porcupine racetrack (G00blar), Monday, 22 June 2009 16:32 (fourteen years ago) link
"downtown"
― rip dom passantino 3/5/09 never forget (max), Monday, 22 June 2009 17:02 (fourteen years ago) link
Low six figures makes total sense to me for the first biography of the guy who presently stands as the last Major American Writer to be really broadly accepted as such and to feel somehow relevant to the culture as a whole -- especially given that he died young enough (and suddenly enough) to have his readership still fresh and curious and caring about him. (I think Stevie's right about academic adoption, too, which is part of what I mean about being the last "Major American Writer.")
― nabisco, Monday, 22 June 2009 17:30 (fourteen years ago) link
i'd tend to agree except that when he died, i did a quick survey of my office (of journalists, mind you, ranging in age from 20s to 60s), and nobody had ever read anything by him and only a few had even vaguely heard of him. i mean, i totally think he's a major dude and all, and i have plenty of friends who are dfw devotees. but his presence in the culture was always pretty tenuous. i bet i know more people who have read michael chabon or jonathan franzen than have read dfw. actually i'm sure of it.
but hey, i hope the bio's a hit. i'm all for more dfw.
― us_odd_bunny_lady (tipsy mothra), Monday, 22 June 2009 23:14 (fourteen years ago) link
(btw, since discovering that appalling lapse in my office, i have successfully pressed a supposedly fun thing on three people, all of whom liked it.)
― us_odd_bunny_lady (tipsy mothra), Monday, 22 June 2009 23:15 (fourteen years ago) link
i don't doubt that chabon/franzen are more widely known, but nabisco is right, DFW is a Major American Writer and this
i could easily see DFW as a set text on future literature and writing courses, and a biography would be a major secondary source for students, guaranteeing long term steady sales.
is otm, and probably what merits the big ticket price.
― i want to marry a pizza (gbx), Monday, 22 June 2009 23:19 (fourteen years ago) link
No doubt that certain others might be more widely read. I'm trying without success to think of more ways to unpack what I mean with the construct "Major American Writer" -- possibly one aspect of it is that it's a lot easier to imagine DFW devotees reading a biography of him than it is to imagine many people ever for any reason being even slightly interested in reading a biography of Michael Chabon.
― nabisco, Monday, 22 June 2009 23:25 (fourteen years ago) link
yah or Franzen (or even Eugenides)
― Mr. Que, Monday, 22 June 2009 23:29 (fourteen years ago) link
eggers
― FREE DOM AND ETHAN (special guest stars mark bronson), Monday, 22 June 2009 23:31 (fourteen years ago) link
(obviously that's not remotely meant as a knock on those dudes, just one gauge of whatever sort of Major Writer significance happens to attach to people, versus just having your books enjoyed and everyone assuming you're just a person)
― nabisco, Monday, 22 June 2009 23:32 (fourteen years ago) link
i never did make it through the corrections
― attack! attack! "stick stickly" youtube video 2:48 nvr frgt (M@tt He1ges0n), Monday, 22 June 2009 23:32 (fourteen years ago) link
sorry i doubt anyone would read an eggers bio in the way they'd read a Wallace bio
― Mr. Que, Monday, 22 June 2009 23:33 (fourteen years ago) link
though i'd read the shit out of a gaddis bio
is there a vollman bio? i would read that.
― attack! attack! "stick stickly" youtube video 2:48 nvr frgt (M@tt He1ges0n), Monday, 22 June 2009 23:36 (fourteen years ago) link
― Mr. Que, Tuesday, June 23, 2009 1:33 AM (1 minute ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink
the fuck does this even mean?
the book did not get low six figs because the publisher felt that, as the last great american writer, david foster wallace warranted a well-remunerated biographer.
― FREE DOM AND ETHAN (special guest stars mark bronson), Monday, 22 June 2009 23:37 (fourteen years ago) link
This is the thing about the freshness of it, though, obviously: if DFW had continued on unto the age of 85 writing whatever it is he would have written, there is every chance that he'd have expired well-known or out-of-fashion or any of a million things that would make a biography not seem all that important to anyone. There's a pretty ideal arrangement of factors here to make a biography valuable (not least the posthumous flow of obits and articles and so on that first started converting him in people's heads to someone with a complete life that you might really start thinking of as A Life).
xpost - haha I think Que was pretty clear there, though obviously it depends on what Eggers does between here and when he dies
― nabisco, Monday, 22 June 2009 23:39 (fourteen years ago) link
(P.S. if we are going to play a "what the fuck does this even mean" game, I think seemingly non-sequitur posting of the name "Eggers" in the middle of the conversation probably merits it -- I don't follow your point, could you explain more?)
― nabisco, Monday, 22 June 2009 23:40 (fourteen years ago) link
the book probably got the low six figures because the guy wrote a great, interesting article for the new yorker and probably followed up on it with a great proposal
― Mr. Que, Monday, 22 June 2009 23:44 (fourteen years ago) link
It seems like all the juicy Eggers bio stuff is already plainly embedded in '...heartbreaking' while DFW was pretty cagey about putting anything personal not involving tennis or math or grammar out there, so a bio that connects the dots seems less redundant in DFW's case at the very least.
― Philip Nunez, Monday, 22 June 2009 23:47 (fourteen years ago) link
I'm not sure why Eggers' name is here at all ... if he died tomorrow much of his life would be covered in the memoir, and if he went on doing Eggersy things for 40 years I don't think he'd merit a significant biography -- maybe a book tracing out some larger McSweeney's-associated aesthetic, if that still seems somehow significant, or maybe long after that one of those books that takes up a more "minor" figure to make some larger cultural point.
Wish I could unpack the "Major American Writer" thing; maybe a good way to think about it in this context is people whose biographies wouldn't look too out of place on an imagined shelf alongside books about Oates, Mailer, Didion, Vidal, Morrison, Salinger,* etc. Canonical writers; writers people in an English department might casually refer to by last name only without feeling like that meant anything.
* haha at some point that one would either get really boring or really interesting
― nabisco, Tuesday, 23 June 2009 00:02 (fourteen years ago) link
in 40 years we will all be living in roboeurope under a muslim pope
― Lamp, Tuesday, 23 June 2009 00:05 (fourteen years ago) link
reading robert jordan biographies
yeah, no doubt. and my surprise at it, like i said, mostly no doubt reveals how little i know about publishing. i have no idea how many books you even have to sell to recoup a $100,000-plus advance. or how well literary biographies sell as a rule. or, you know, anything about it at all.
as for the major writer thing, i don't know. had wallace reached the level of someone like delillo, in terms of scholarly interest or ubiquity in the curriculum? (honest question -- i was never a lit major in the first place, much less within the last 10 years.) i think he's important because he's important to me, but i don't have a very clear sense of how widespread that impression is. i guess i've thought of him as a little bit more of a cult figure. which doesn't rule out his being a major writer, i just have no idea what his standing is with the literary/critical establishment.
― us_odd_bunny_lady (tipsy mothra), Tuesday, 23 June 2009 04:16 (fourteen years ago) link
no doubt.
The question isn't whether DFW reached the level of ubiquity on curricula as Delillo has (he hasn't yet), it's whether he's reached a threshold of 'major-ness' in those worlds...is there a big enough silent majority of people (in the 'scholarly community,' say) who recognize him as major writer for people to talk about him across their own particular specialisms without explaining why he's worthy of being talked/written about? I think the answer to that is definitely yes. (The answer is not yes, btw, in English department-world, for Chabon, whom I heard someone give a paper on in December. The speaker felt the need to introduce him in a way that made clear he felt he could not assume everyone would know who he was.)
― still counting on porcupine racetrack (G00blar), Tuesday, 23 June 2009 06:45 (fourteen years ago) link
the other book's getting published - http://artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/06/26/another-david-foster-wallace-biography-is-planned/
― just sayin, Tuesday, 30 June 2009 08:38 (fourteen years ago) link
readin oblivion; it sucks
― FUCKIN 'TALLICA BRO (cankles), Tuesday, 30 June 2009 15:26 (fourteen years ago) link
i read like 4 stories from it and was pretty 50/50 on 'em...then i gave up.
not really my thing tbh.
― call all destroyer, Tuesday, 30 June 2009 15:27 (fourteen years ago) link
the one to read is Infinite Jest--it's his best work by a long shot everything else, for the most part is another level down in terms of quality
― Mr. Que, Tuesday, 30 June 2009 15:28 (fourteen years ago) link
Just out of curiosity, has DeLillo been adopted onto curricula beyond White Noise? Am asking because I don't think anyone thinks of Sandra Cisneros as a major writer, despite the fact that House on Mango Street is hella read in high schools and colleges. I mean, it's pretty obvious to me that DeLillo is more of a major writer than Cisneros is -- but I don't know that we can go by "he's read in English classes" as the sole standard.
― great gabbneb's ghost (jaymc), Tuesday, 30 June 2009 15:31 (fourteen years ago) link
i never finished oblivion; i didnt hate it but at the time it was just too dense & involved and i was beginning to dread picking it up to read.
broom of the system is great & funny and easier to read. and not as big and intimidating as IJ
― rip dom passantino 3/5/09 never forget (max), Tuesday, 30 June 2009 15:33 (fourteen years ago) link
i said to cankles the other day that i wanted to jump to defend oblivion but i felt like someone going "no no jerry garcia's playing on the 70s versions of dark star is totally different"
broom of the system's first chapter is a glimmer of real potential; a lot of the rest of the book he spends being the sort of writer he spent a lot of the rest of his career kicking against
― thomp, Tuesday, 30 June 2009 15:42 (fourteen years ago) link
my po-mo/contemporary american lit. course as an undergrad had cosmopolis on it, by the way: i get the feeling this one might be on a lot of syllabi bcz it's easy to teach in a "Hey, kids, this is what POSTMODERNISM looks like" way, like the dead father is.
― thomp, Tuesday, 30 June 2009 15:44 (fourteen years ago) link
oblivion is patchy but "good old neon" and "oblivion" are undeniably great.
― jed_, Tuesday, 30 June 2009 16:04 (fourteen years ago) link
good old neon is the only one i actively hated
― FUCKIN 'TALLICA BRO (cankles), Tuesday, 30 June 2009 16:09 (fourteen years ago) link
guess undeniably was the wrong adverb to use
― rip dom passantino 3/5/09 never forget (max), Tuesday, 30 June 2009 16:11 (fourteen years ago) link
heh. yeah. undeniably owned.
― FUCKIN 'TALLICA BRO (cankles), Tuesday, 30 June 2009 16:17 (fourteen years ago) link
http://www.samplereality.com/2009/07/19/the-truth-behind-jay-murray-siskinds-review-of-david-foster-wallace/
― Mr. Que, Wednesday, 22 July 2009 20:55 (fourteen years ago) link
hey guys, i'm trying to find an essay written by a woman who taught a class on david foster wallace after he died. i think she's a professor at the same college he taught at and the article talked about the temptation of reading too much of his life in the work. does anyone have the link? i'm not having any luck here.
― Ømår Littel (Jordan), Wednesday, 22 July 2009 21:06 (fourteen years ago) link
look at infinitesummer.org -- I think she did a blog post there about teaching the class
― nabisco, Wednesday, 22 July 2009 21:08 (fourteen years ago) link
Kathleen Fitzpatrick, is that who you're looking for? http://infinitesummer.org/archives/931
― nabisco, Wednesday, 22 July 2009 21:09 (fourteen years ago) link
sure is, thanks!
― Ømår Littel (Jordan), Wednesday, 22 July 2009 21:24 (fourteen years ago) link
http://www.zdf.de/ZDFmediathek/content/823228?inPopup=true
^^this interview is so great
― johnny crunch, Friday, 28 August 2009 02:22 (fourteen years ago) link
wow. i'm only like ten minutes in, too.
― Mr. Que, Friday, 28 August 2009 02:35 (fourteen years ago) link
some great mp3s here incl. old DFW interviews and a long interview with his sister with some funny anecdotes.
― Ømår Littel (Jordan), Thursday, 3 September 2009 18:09 (fourteen years ago) link
where
― just sayin, Thursday, 3 September 2009 18:21 (fourteen years ago) link
oh ha
http://www.wpr.org/book/090823a.cfm
― Ømår Littel (Jordan), Thursday, 3 September 2009 18:29 (fourteen years ago) link