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Conversations with David Foster Wallace PDF

209 Pages·2012·1.05 MB·English
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Conversations with David Foster Wallace Literary Conversations Series Peggy Whitman Prenshaw General Editor This page intentionally left blank Conversations with David Foster Wallace Edited by Stephen J. Burn University Press of Mississippi Jackson Books by David Foster Wallace The Broom of the System. New York: Viking-Penguin, 1987. Girl with Curious Hair. New York: Norton, 1989. With Mark Costello. Signifying Rappers. New York: Ecco, 1990. Infinite Jest. Boston: Little, 1996. A Supposedly Fun Thing I’ll Never Do Again. Boston: Little, 1997. Brief Interviews with Hideous Men. Boston: Little, 1999. Up, Simba! Seven Days on the Trail of an Anticandidate. Boston: Little, 2000. Everything and More: A Compact History of ∞. New York: Norton, 2003. Oblivion. Boston: Little, 2004. Consider the Lobster. Boston: Little, 2005. McCain’s Promise: Aboard the Straight Talk Express with John McCain and a Whole Bunch of Actual Reporters, Thinking about Hope. Fwd. Jacob Weisberg. Boston: Back-Little, 2008. This Is Water. Boston: Little, 2009. Fate, Time, and Language: An Essay on Free Will. Ed. Steven M. Cahn and Maureen Eckert. Introd. James Ryerson New York: Columbia UP 2011. The Pale King. Ed. Michael Pietsch. Boston: Little, 2011. www.upress.state.ms.us The University Press of Mississippi is a member of the Association of American University Presses. “Approaching Infinity,” an interview with David Foster Wallace conducted by Caleb Crain, originally published in The Boston Globe, Copyright © 2003 by Caleb Crain, used with per- mission of The Wylie Agency LLC. Copyright © 2012 by University Press of Mississippi All rights reserved Manufactured in the United States of America First printing 2012 ∞ Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Conversations with David Foster Wallace / edited by Stephen J. Burn. p. cm. — (Literary conversations series) Includes index. ISBN 978-1-61703-226-4 (cloth : alk. paper) — ISBN 978-1-61703-227-1 (pbk. : alk. paper) — ISBN 978-1-61703-228-8 (ebook) 1. Wallace, David Foster—Interviews. 2. Authors, American—20th century—Interviews. I. Burn, Stephen. PS3573.A425635Z66 2012 813’.54—dc23 2011027372 British Library Cataloging-in-Publication Data available Contents Introduction ix Chronology xix David Foster Wallace: A Profile 3 William R. Katovsky / 1987 A Whiz Kid and His Wacky First Novel 8 Helen Dudar / 1987 Looking for a Garde of Which to Be Avant: An Interview with David Foster Wallace 11 Hugh Kennedy and Geoffrey Polk / 1993 An Expanded Interview with David Foster Wallace 21 Larry McCaffery / 1993 The Next Big Thing: Can a Downstate Author Withstand the Sensation over His 1,079-Page Novel? 53 Mark Caro / 1996 The Salon Interview: David Foster Wallace 58 Laura Miller / 1996 The Wasted Land 66 David Streitfeld / 1996 David Foster Wallace Winces at the Suggestion That His Book Is Sloppy in Any Sense 70 Anne Marie Donahue/1996 v vi CONTENTS Young Writers and the TV Reality 73 Donn Fry / 1997 The “Infinite Story” Cult Hero behind the 1,079-Page Novel Rides the Hype He Skewered 76 Matthew Gilbert / 1997 David Foster Wallace 82 Tom Scocca / 1998 David Foster Wallace: In the Company of Creeps 89 Lorin Stein / 1999 David Foster Wallace Warms Up 94 Patrick Arden / 1999 Mischief: A Brief Interview with David Foster Wallace 101 Chris Wright / 1999 Behind the Watchful Eyes of Author David Foster Wallace 104 Mark Shechner / 2000 Conversation with David Foster Wallace and Richard Powers 110 John O’Brien / 2000 Approaching Infinity 121 Caleb Crain / 2003 To the Best of Our Knowledge: Interview with David Foster Wallace 127 Steve Paulson / 2004 The Connection: David Foster Wallace 136 Michael Goldfarb / 2004 Interview with David Foster Wallace 152 Didier Jacob / 2005 Just Asking . . . David Foster Wallace 158 Christopher John Farley / 2008 CONTENTS vii The Lost Years and Last Days of David Foster Wallace 161 David Lipsky / 2008 Index 183 This page intentionally left blank Introduction “I’m wretched at interviews,” David Foster Wallace told me in a letter sent late in the summer of 2007, “and will do them only under big duress.”1 Wal- lace’s discomfort with interviews makes sense on multiple levels. His con- cern about public revelation is reasonable in terms of the overall arc of his career, which shuttled between what Wallace called the “schizophrenia of attention” and the despondency of private torment (Stein). Equally, his the- matic obsessions—self consciousness, the difficult exchange economy that exists between characters’ interior landscapes and the world around them— draw on the same energies that might be located in the interview process. Fi- nally, one of Wallace’s signature techniques for revealing character through dialogue—the one-sided conversation, which we might call the belled inter- view, after a term coined for Nabokov’s critique of telephone conversations where the reader hears only one speaker2—turned the mechanics of an in- terview into a central focus of Wallace’s middle-period fiction (Infinite Jest [1996] and Brief Interviews [1999]). This nexus of imaginative activity made the set-piece of an interview something more than a polite formality for Wallace, a pursuit that could not be coolly divorced from creative practice. But there were clearly more personal reasons why Wallace became reticent about interviews. After he became engulfed in the media storm surround- ingInfinite Jest, Wallace wrote to Don DeLillo about the experience: If you try to be unpretentious and candid, a reporter comments on the unpre- tentious, candid persona you’ve adopted for the interview. It ends up being lonely and wildly depressing. And strange. I had guys in my house (a tactical error). . . . The guy from the Post . . . who’s become a friend because he was my first interview and I was wildly indiscreet about stuff like drug histories . . . and he stopped me in the middle and patiently explained certain rules about what to tell reporters . . .3 Yet good advice might only lessen, not eradicate, personal intrusion. When Frank Bruni interviewed Wallace for New York Times Magazine, he felt obliged to chronicle the contents of the novelist’s medicine cabinet (“his bathroom contains special tooth polish to combat the effects of the tobacco ix

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Across two decades of intense creativity, David Foster Wallace (1962-2008) crafted a remarkable body of work that ranged from unclassifiable essays, to a book about transfinite mathematics, to vertiginous fictions. Whether through essay volumes (A Supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again, Consider t
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