David Foster Wallace vs. Thomas Pynchon

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donald barthelme once said "anybody can write a beautiful sentence." mieville disproves that one.

Ward Fowler, Thursday, 6 September 2012 18:58 (twelve years ago) link

Melville, Euegen O'Neill: clumsy geniuses.

Earth, Wind & Fire & Alabama (Eazy), Thursday, 6 September 2012 18:59 (twelve years ago) link

Which of these authors' works look the coolest when you're holding them at an awkwardly show-offy angle in front of your face while riding the train?

This Whole Fridge Is Full Of (Old Lunch), Thursday, 6 September 2012 19:07 (twelve years ago) link

depends who's watching

i know your nuts hurt! who's laughing? (contenderizer), Thursday, 6 September 2012 19:13 (twelve years ago) link

delaney seems the closest sf author to these other dudes (tho' yeah, there are def bits of moorcock quite similar to pynchon, esp), but Limbo by bernard wolfe deserves to be much better known imho:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernard_Wolfe

Ward Fowler, Thursday, 6 September 2012 19:14 (twelve years ago) link

lamp calling him 'foster wallace' like it's all one long surname is hilarious but maybe he's doing that on purpose to rankle dfw stans

IN REAL LIFE (some dude), Thursday, 6 September 2012 19:17 (twelve years ago) link

I call him wally

stop swearing and start windmilling (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 6 September 2012 19:18 (twelve years ago) link

Davey Fo Wallier

IN REAL LIFE (some dude), Thursday, 6 September 2012 19:21 (twelve years ago) link

a new urban townhome development in elegant fowa

next to the alexander wang flagship

Lamp, Thursday, 6 September 2012 19:23 (twelve years ago) link

fosty

Mr. Que, Thursday, 6 September 2012 19:23 (twelve years ago) link

De gustibus non disputandum est

but polling is ok

Aimless, Thursday, 6 September 2012 19:27 (twelve years ago) link

Pynchon.

emil.y, Thursday, 6 September 2012 19:28 (twelve years ago) link

i liked david foster wallace when he was writing sort stories and magazine articles...i bailed on the corrections.

same w/me. but long books per se don't bother me, i read gravity's rainbow fitfully over the course of year, glad i did. but i sorta gave up on pynchon after vineland, still have that copy of mason/dixon sitting uncracked on the shelf. haven't kept up w/pynchon. his latest sounds dopey. franzen seems like a well-intentioned windbag, his new yorker essay on dfw was heartfelt but reading it was like chasing a shaggy dog.

(REAL NAME) (m coleman), Thursday, 6 September 2012 19:40 (twelve years ago) link

joyce, austen over the lot.

― balls, Thursday, 6 September 2012 18:41 (57 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

haha c'mon

thomp, Thursday, 6 September 2012 19:41 (twelve years ago) link

in that case i am having a write-in vote for william shakespeare, geoffrey chaucer, and virgil

thomp, Thursday, 6 September 2012 19:42 (twelve years ago) link

ha! xp!

(adjusts pince nez)

Shakespeare, my dears, Shakespeare!

Aimless, Thursday, 6 September 2012 19:44 (twelve years ago) link

i might have shared this non-anecdote before but this anthropologist girl i know who doesn't read that much was drunk the other day and really effusive about how great this author she'd started reading was, who was called david foster wallace, and he's so good, he's amazing, have you heard of him

thomp, Thursday, 6 September 2012 19:46 (twelve years ago) link

i post this not to make fun of her but because it brought home to me that there are people who found their lives on totally different assumptions to mine

thomp, Thursday, 6 September 2012 19:46 (twelve years ago) link

hey John Barth - I read Giles Goat Boy so long ago I can't remember much about it

this summer I read Conversation In The Cathedral by Mario Vargas Llosa, that was 600+ page novel that managed to be epic: complex in terms of plot and characters yet concise in the prose dept. even in translation, w/Llosa you really hear the rhythm and cadence of Spanish speakers. I think Franzen could learn a lot from him.

(REAL NAME) (m coleman), Thursday, 6 September 2012 19:47 (twelve years ago) link

xpost what assumptions are those? seems like she's just not a part of the same discourses as yourself (irl or internet)

karl...arlk...rlka...lkar..., Thursday, 6 September 2012 19:50 (twelve years ago) link

same w/me. but long books per se don't bother me, i read gravity's rainbow fitfully over the course of year, glad i did. but i sorta gave up on pynchon after vineland, still have that copy of mason/dixon sitting uncracked on the shelf. haven't kept up w/pynchon. his latest sounds dopey. franzen seems like a well-intentioned windbag, his new yorker essay on dfw was heartfelt but reading it was like chasing a shaggy dog.

― (REAL NAME) (m coleman)

lol, every word of this is true for me, too. glad i read gravity's rainbow (and V.), less glad i read vineland, quickly gave up on mason/dixon, haven't looked back.

i know your nuts hurt! who's laughing? (contenderizer), Thursday, 6 September 2012 19:56 (twelve years ago) link

V. is alltime

Mordy, Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:00 (twelve years ago) link

xpost what assumptions are those? seems like she's just not a part of the same discourses as yourself (irl or internet)

― karl...arlk...rlka...lkar..., Thursday, 6 September 2012 19:50 (10 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

that was the joke i was going for, yeah

thomp, Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:01 (twelve years ago) link

gravity's rainbow > vineland > against the day > mason & dixon > inherent vice> lot 49 > v.

thomp, Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:02 (twelve years ago) link

i have that reversed entirely except gravity's 3rd best for me

Mordy, Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:02 (twelve years ago) link

let's poll it! okay let's not poll it

i would probably put slow learner on the left hand end somewhere, too

thomp, Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:04 (twelve years ago) link

yeah, of the few i've read:

lot 49 > v. > gravity's rainbow > vineland > etc

i know your nuts hurt! who's laughing? (contenderizer), Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:05 (twelve years ago) link

george saunders

iglu ferrignu, Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:23 (twelve years ago) link

lot 49 is pynchons best imo

pynchon maybe over dfw? idk i love infinite jest so much that its hard to say

O_o-O_O-o_O (jjjusten), Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:37 (twelve years ago) link

DFW is more personally affecting. Pynchon was more stylistically and compositionally groundbreaking. FRanzen was a big boring miniseries of a novel.

do people care about Barth anymore? I feel like they did maybe in the 70's, and then never again. Certainly when I was in my early 20's and into metafiction and pretentious I thought he was great but no-one really credited him at the time. Then DFW came around, and Coover got some traction, but Barth still seemed overlooked or relegated to the garage sales of university towns. Oddly just two hours ago, I bought a pristine first edition of Chimera at a bookstore for $10.

akm, Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:39 (twelve years ago) link

does it have tits on the cover

thomp, Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:39 (twelve years ago) link

what about William Vollmann? Does anyone really care about him? I pretended to and tried to for a few years there and then I just gave up.

akm, Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:40 (twelve years ago) link

rising up, rising down is pretty good

O_o-O_O-o_O (jjjusten), Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:40 (twelve years ago) link

I've always gotten Barth, Barthelme, and Barthes confused and can't say any of them left an impression on me

stop swearing and start windmilling (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:40 (twelve years ago) link

Vollmann did some good stuff, primarily his short story collections (Rainbow, Atlas) but his preoccupations with prostitutes and just general degradation got kinda tiresome for me after awhile

stop swearing and start windmilling (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:41 (twelve years ago) link

i have been thinking abt some of the really lost dudes recently - anybody remember when mark leyner was going to bust literature wide open?

O_o-O_O-o_O (jjjusten), Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:42 (twelve years ago) link

i liked bright and risen angels a lot

Lamp, Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:42 (twelve years ago) link

am in fairly close agreement w/ thomp's ranking eg

gravity's rainbow > vineland > mason & dixon > slow learner > against the day > inherent vice > the crying of lot 49 > v

gravity's rainbow seems to me far away and his best work - still the best invocation of london i've ever read - whereas v at times seems like self-parody

Ward Fowler, Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:44 (twelve years ago) link

Barth: wrote novels
Barthelme: (donald) wrote mainly short stories
Barthelme: (f) his brother, wrote something else, dunno, never read them
Barthes: wrote criticism and not fiction

akm, Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:45 (twelve years ago) link

i read and enjoyed a Leyner book when i was like 12 and tend to think of it as the kind of thing that only self-impressed 12 year olds should really enjoy

IN REAL LIFE (some dude), Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:45 (twelve years ago) link

guy writers

lag∞n, Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:45 (twelve years ago) link

yeah I remember when the first leyner book came out. I was an inifiniately hot and intense dot. blah blah. now he writes like, humor books or something.

akm, Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:45 (twelve years ago) link

fred barthelme wrote (writes?) novels

Ward Fowler, Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:46 (twelve years ago) link

barthes killed a bunch of authors. all of them actually.

Mordy, Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:46 (twelve years ago) link

all of vollmann's books have 'rising' or 'risen' or 'angel' in the title. I saw him read once, he brought a gun. also he was kind of a freak, not in a good way, in a creepy "i don't want to live on the same street as this guy' way.

DFW was really nice the two times I saw him read. Funny, engaging.

akm, Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:47 (twelve years ago) link

i think one is called europe something tbf to be even fairer i can imagine hes a p terrible person

Lamp, Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:48 (twelve years ago) link

what is this bullshit
Voted for somebody else

blank, Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:50 (twelve years ago) link

xpost
europe central

paul auster seemed a p big deal at one point, at least in the uk, but his stock seems to have fallen in recent years, at least in the uk

Ward Fowler, Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:52 (twelve years ago) link

the prolegomena to vollmann's 'calculus of violence' thing is all about how beautiful this one knife he owns is, there are pictures

leyner had his first non-'humour' book in ages this year, all part of the whole back-to-the-late-80s-early-90s thing that's going on you know

thomp, Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:53 (twelve years ago) link

auster is shite!!

thomp, Thursday, 6 September 2012 20:53 (twelve years ago) link


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