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The Howling Fantods! News since March '97
Index for Lipsky Book
DFW Biography
Monday, 16 August 2010
Mark over at Ghostwood Hotel has put together a super useful index for David Lipsky's Although of Course You End Up Becoming Yourself.
 
Cheers, Mark!
 
 
The Best Magazine Articles Ever
General Updates
Monday, 02 August 2010
It's been interesting watching The Best Magazine Articles Ever evolve over the weekend while I was away. Great to see some of David Foster Wallace's best non-fiction there (nothing new for regular visitors here, I don't think, and welcome if you've found this site as a result of the list!), but there are also many, many fantastic pieces of non-fiction to read. Check it out.
 
[Thanks, Jeff]
 
L.A. Times Books DFW Stuff
General Updates
Monday, 02 August 2010
Couple of things from the L.A. Times Books section over the weekend.
 
 
[Cheers, Ian] 
 
Bret Easton Ellis on DFW Part II
General Updates
Saturday, 31 July 2010
Irish Times interview with Bret Easton Ellis, End of the novel, end of the empire , turns to David Foster Wallace:
 
“Never met him. Never responded to the work. I pretty much read everything he wrote because you were kind of supposed to. He is a big deal in American letters and . . . I never really liked anything he wrote. I tried to read Infinite Jest three or four times and never cracked it. I found the stories didn’t interest me. And I am in the minority: I didn’t like the essays either. He suffers from a kind of midwestern earnestness that I found unbearable. And I don’t think it is too soon . . . but I find his earnestness very irritating. I just finished reading this long book of interviews he did and . . . you can be too smart for fiction.
“The way he spoke about a lot of things is just not my school of thought. And yes, he was probably a genius. And yes, I was very moved by his death. I was very touched by his pain. I really was. It was a shock. And there was a really moving account of it by I think it was DT Max in the New Yorker . And, you know, I was in tears. But! Let’s just get real and separate the man, who I did not know, and the work.”
 
Bret Easton Ellis on DFW previously.
 
 
Supposedly Fun Things...
General Updates
Friday, 30 July 2010
After some discussion on wallace-l (led by good friend of mine, George Carr) a number of David Foster Wallace enthusiasts decided it might be fun to write about things they'd experienced with the same kind of eye that DFW used in his non-fiction collection, A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never do Again. Ryan Blanck (of Letters to DFW - check out his latest about The Depressed Person) jumped on board and set up a blog to host it all on and now there are a number of 'Supposedly Fun Things...' to read about.
 
I've been waiting until there's a bit of content to post about, but they are also after submissions. So please help them out and submit your supposedly fun things. Thanks George and Ryan!
 
Jon Gray Cover Art for The Pale King?
The Pale King
Thursday, 29 July 2010
Update: I've been told, "there is no official cover yet for the Pale King" and enough to be able to post that the tweets below are most likely related to mock-ups for possible covers.
 
(I'm glad I put a question mark in the title of this post!)
 
---
 
Sounds like Jon Gray is the cover artist for The Pale King! I've always loved the covers of the Jonathan Safran Foer novels. This news thanks to a couple of tweets from Joe Pickering (@Joethepublicist) and Matt Clacher (@mattclacher) from Penguin books in London:
 
Joethepublicist Tremendous excitement here on getting to see sneak peaks at the copy and jacket for David Foster Wallace's The Pale King
 
mattclacher I had a cheeky sneak peak at the cover art for David Foster Wallace's The Pale King. Jon Gray has done a killer job on it.
 

[Follow me on twitter @nick_maniatis]

 
Winter Cleaning Part I
General Updates
Thursday, 29 July 2010
I'm moving The Howling Fantods to a new host in the near future (hopefully nothing will change at your end apart from possibly a few days downtime) so I thought I make sure things were in good shape before the move.
 
Part I has been to look at the dedicated pages for David Foster Wallace's oldest book publications:
 
 
 
&
 
 
I think I've caught all the broken links, and added a few more reviews or resources (so you might find something new in the links above if you have not visited for a while), but they are still pretty light on content compared to the rest of the site. 
 
That's where you all come in! Have you got links to any reviews or resources for these texts? If so please let me know.
 
Over the next few weeks I'll be looking at other parts of the site but feel free to let me know about anything before I get to those sections.
 
This is also a good time to contact me if you've been having any difficulties logging in to leave comments. I've noticed a few users have had their accounts disabled as a result of a bug (I think I've resolved the issue), so I'm keen to know if you've had any issues recently.
 
Thanks, everyone.
 
Some Notes on Sincerity in David Foster Wallace’s Uncollected and Less-Well-Known Work
Critical Analysis
Wednesday, 28 July 2010
Brad Fest over at The Hyperarchival Parallax has posted an article title: Repackaging the Archive (Part IV): Some Notes on Sincerity in David Foster Wallace’s Uncollected and Less-Well-Known Work. He's looking forward to the upcoming publication of the critical collection, Consider David Foster Wallace: Critical Essays (it's great btw, read about it here and here), and gives some explanation of why:
 
I am currently quite eager to read one of the first collections of essays on DFW coming out next month, Consider David Foster Wallace: Critical Essays, edited by David Hering, specifically an essay on what is being called the “new sincerity” by Adam Kelly.  I feel the DFW that gets read the most—his novel(s) and his journalism—continually hint at or give great meaningful gestures toward sincerity, but perhaps b/c of their form never really achieve what so many of his short stories do so devastatingly, howling-fantod-inspiringly well: they are un-dauntingly sincere.  Painful sincerity.  So sincere that reading the deep ironies of something like John Barth’s much anthologized “Lost in the Funhouse” acts like a kind of balm.  For the sensitive summer soul, the cold analysis of Wittgenstein is far preferable to the at times crushing-lack-of-irony in some of DFW’s short fiction.  Esp. when one reads story after story of people who simply cannot connect w/ one another, for every reason under the sun; or else people who are almost supernaturally connected and subsequently get dramatically, heart-wrenchingly sundered from one another. Basically, where’s Paul de Man when you need him?
 
Read the whole piece here.
 
Original Version of Signifying Rappers
Articles or Essays by DFW
Tuesday, 27 July 2010
You can read the original version of David Foster Wallace's and Mark Costello's (highly underrated - I love it) non-fiction book Signifying Rappers: Rap and Race in the Urban Present (Amazon link) at The Missouri Review.
 
 
Student Evaluation by DFW
General Updates
Tuesday, 27 July 2010
Ever wondered what an end of course evaluation would look like if your teacher was David Foster Wallace? 22 years ago this was the case for Jessamyn, and she's posted an image of the evaluation to flickr! Thanks for sharing this, Jessamyn.
 
(Cheers, Adam)
 
Big Red Son's Harold Hecuba
General Updates
Monday, 26 July 2010
Glenn Kenny [previously] writes a bit more about 'Harold Hecuba' from Big Red Son over at his blog, Some Came Running:
 
The real person who appears in Wallace's essay under the pseudonym "Harold Hecuba" was/is my friend Evan Wright, who gives a brief account of how he came to meet Wallace in the introduction to his latest collection of journalism, Hella Nation. [...] Wright, who at the time of this meeting was on the staff of Hustler magazine, and trying rather desperately to get leave the staff of Hustler magazine, also discusses his initial befuddlement at some of Wallace's references (the two in fact became pretty fast friends not too long after first meeting, though) ...
 
Continue reading over at Some Came Running.
 
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