Author Topic: RIP David Foster Wallace  (Read 854 times)

jocelyn

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RIP David Foster Wallace
« on: September 28, 2008, 08:23:45 pm »
Infinite Jest is possibly my favorite contemporary novel. This news really saddens me.


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Novelist David Foster Wallace found dead
Sep 13, 2008
CLAREMONT, Calif. (AP) — David Foster Wallace, the author best known for his 1996 novel "Infinite Jest," was found dead in his home, according to police. He was 46.
Wallace\'s wife found her husband had hanged himself when she returned home about 9:30 p.m. Friday, said Jackie Morales, a records clerk with the Claremont Police Department.
Wallace taught creative writing and English at nearby Pomona College.
"He cared deeply for his students and transformed the lives of many young people," said Dean Gary Kates. "It\'s a great loss to our teaching faculty."
Wallace\'s first novel, "The Broom of the System," gained national attention in 1987 for its ambition and offbeat humor. The New York Times said the 24-year-old author "attempts to give us a portrait, through a combination of Joycean word games, literary parody and zany picaresque adventure, of a contemporary America run amok."
Published in 1996, "Infinite Jest" cemented Wallace\'s reputation as a major American literary figure. The 1,000-plus-page tome, praised for its complexity and dark wit, topped many best-of lists. Time Magazine named "Infinite Jest" in its issue of the "100 Best English-language Novels from 1923 to 2005."
Wallace received a "genius grant" from the MacArthur Foundation in 1997.
In 2002, Wallace was hired to teach at Pomona in a tenured English Department position endowed by Roy E. Disney. Kates said when the school began searching for the ideal candidate, Wallace was the first person considered.
"The committee said, \'we need a person like David Foster Wallace.\' They said that in the abstract," Kates said. "When he was approached and accepted, they were heads over heels. He was really the ideal person for the position."
Wallace\'s short fiction was published in Esquire, GQ, Harper\'s, The New Yorker and the Paris Review. Collections of his short stories were published as "Girl With Curious Hair" and "Brief Interviews With Hideous Men."
He wrote nonfiction for several publications, including an essay on the U.S. Open for Tennis magazine and a profile of the director David Lynch for Premiere.
Born in Ithaca, N.Y., Wallace attended Amherst College and the University of Arizona.




Here\'s an appropriate excerpt from Infinite Jest:

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The so-called ‘psychotically depressed’ person who tries to kill herself doesn’t do so out of quote ‘hopelessness’ or any abstract conviction that life’s assets and debits do not square. And surely not because death seems suddenly appealing. The person in whom Its invisible agony reaches a certain unendurable level will kill herself the same way a trapped person will eventually jump from the window of a burning high-rise. Make no mistake about people who leap from burning windows. Their terror of falling from a great height is still just as great as it would be for you or me standing speculatively at the same window just checking out the view; i.e. the fear of falling remains a constant. The variable here is the other terror, the fire’s flames: when the flames get close enough, falling to death becomes the slightly less terrible of two terrors. It’s not desiring the fall; it’s terror of the flames. And yet nobody down on the sidewalk, looking up and yelling ‘Don’t!’ and ‘Hang on!’, can understand the jump. Not really. You’d have to have personally been trapped and felt flames to really understand a terror way beyond falling.



Something a little more lighthearted (sort of) from Infinite Jest:

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The night after the depressing and awkward joint Interdependence Day party for Enfield\'s Ennet House Recovery Home, Somerville\'s Phoenix House, and Dorchester\'s grim New Choices juvenile rehab, Ennet House staffer Johnette Foltz took Ken Erdedy and Kate Gompert along with her to this one NA beginners\' discussion meeting where the topic was always marijuana: how every addict at the meeting had gotten in terrible addictive trouble with it right from the first Dubois, or else how they\'d been strung out on harder drugs and had tried switching to grass to get off the original drugs and but then had gotten in even terribler trouble with grass than they\'d been in with the original hard stuff. This was supposedly the only NA meeting in metro Boston explicitly devoted to marijuana. Johnette Foltz said she wanted Erdedy and Gompert to see how completely ununique they were in terms of the substance that had brought them down.

There were about maybe two dozen new recovering addicts there in the anechoic vestry of an upscale church in what Erdedy figured had to be either west Belmont or east Waltham. The chairs were arranged in NA\'s traditional huge circle, with no tables to sit at and everybody balancing ashtrays on their knees and accidentally kicking over their cups of coffee. Everybody who raised their hand to share concurred on the insidious ways marijuana had ravaged their bodies and minds and spirits: grass destroys slowly but thoroughly, was the consensus. Ken Erdedy\'s joggling foot knocked over his coffee not once but twice as the NAs took turns concurring on the hideous psychic fallout they\'d all endured both in active marijuana-dependency and then in marijuana-detox - the social withdrawal and anxious lassitude, the hyperself-consciousness that then reinforced the withdrawal and anxiety, the increasing cognitive abstraction, poverty of affect, and then total emotional catalepsy, the obsessive analyzing, finally the paralytic stasis that results from obsessive analysis of all possible implications of both getting up from the couch and not getting up from the couch - and then the endless symptomatic gauntlet of withdrawal from delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol: grass-detox: the loss of appetite, the mania and insomnia, the chronic fatigue and nightmares, the impotence and cessation of menses and lactation, the circadian arrhythmia, the sudden sauna-type sweats and mental confusion and fine-motor tremors, the particularly nasty excess production of saliva - several beginners still holding institutional drool cups just under their chins - the generalized angst and dread, and the shame of neither MDs nor har-drug NAs showing much compassion for the "addict" brought down by what was supposed to be one of nature\'s humbler buzzes, the benignest narcotic around.

Ken Erdedy noticed that nobody came right out and used the term "depression" or "melancholy," much less "clinical depression," but this worst of symptoms, this logarithm of all other suffering, seemed, though unmentioned, to hang foglike just over the room\'s heads, to drift between the peristyle columns and over the decorative astrolabes and medieval knock-offs and framed Knights of Columbus charters, a gassy plasm so dreaded no beginner could bear to look up and name it. Kate Gompert kept staring at the floor and making a revolver of her forefinger and thumb and shooting herself in the temple and then blowing pretend-cordite off the barrel\'s lip until Johnette Foltz told her to knock it off.

As was his custom at meetings, Ken Erdedy said nothing and observed everybody else very closely, cracking his knuckles and joggling his foot. Since an-NA beginner is technically anybody with under a year clean, there there were wildly varying degrees of denial and distress and general cluelessness in this plush vestry. Though in an upscale suburb, the meeting had NA\'s broad demographic cross-section, but the bulk of these grass-ravaged people looked urban and tough and busted-up and dressed without any color-sense at all, people you could easily imagine smacking their kid in a supermarket or lurking with a homemade sap in the dark of a downtown alley. Same as AA. Motley disrespectability was like the room norm, along with glazed eyes and excess spittle. A couple of the beginners still had the milky plastic ID bracelets from psych wards they\'d forgotten to cut off, or else hadn\'t yet gotten up the motivation to do it.

Boston NA has no mid-meeting break and goes for just an hour. At the end of the beginners\' meeting everybody got up and held hands in a circle and recited the NA-Conference-Approved "Just For Today," then they all recited the Our Father, not exactly in unison. Kate Gompert later swore she distinctly heard the wen-studded man beside her say "And lead us not into Penn Station" during the Our Father. Then, just as in AA, the NA meeting closed with everybody shouting to everybody to Keep Coming Back because It Works.

But then everybody here in the room started milling around wildly and hugging each other. It was like somebody\'d thrown a switch. There wasn\'t even very much conversation. It was just hugging, as far as Erdedy could see. Rampant, indiscriminate hugging, where the point seemed to be to hug as many people as possible, totally irregardless of whether you\'d ever seen them before. People went from person to person, arms out and leaning in. Big people stooped and short people got up on tiptoe. Jowls ground into other jowls. Both genders hugged both genders. And the male-to-male hugs were straight embraces, hugs minus the vigorous little thumps on the back that Erdedy\'d always seen as somehow requisite for male-to-male hugs. Johnette Foltz was almost a blur. She went from person to person. She was racking up serious numbers of hugs. Kate Gompert had her usual stern starchy expression of embarrassed distaste, but even she gave and got some hugs. But Erdedy - who\'d never particularly liked hugging - moved way back from the throng, over up next to the NA-Conference-Approved-Literature table, and stood there by himself with his hands in his pockets, pretending to study the coffee urn with great interest.

But then a tall heavy Afro-American fellow with a gold incisor and perfect vertical cylinder of Afro-American hairstyle peeled away from a sort of group-hug nearby, he\'d spotted Erdedy, and the fellow came over and established himself right in front of Erdedy, spreading the arms of his fatigue jacket for a hug, stooping slightly and leaning in toward Erdedy\'s Fersonal trunk region.

Erdedy raised his hands in a benign no-thanks and backed up further so that his bottom was squashed up against the edge of the Conference-Approved-Litemture table.

"Thanks, but I don\'t particularly like to hug," he said.

The fellow had to sort of pull up out of his pre-hug lean, and stood there awkwardly frozen with his big arms still out, which Erdedy could see must have been awkward and embarrassing for the fellow. Erdedy found himself trying to calculate just what remote sub-Asian locale would be the maximum possible number of km away from this exact spot and moment as the fellow just stood there, his arms out and the smile draining from his face.

"Say what?" the fellow said.

Erdedy proffered a hand. "Ken Erdedy, Viney and Veals Advertising, 210 Exchange Place, downtown. How do you do. You are?"

The fellow slowly let his arms down but just looked at Erdedy\'s proffered hand. A single styptic blink. "Roy Tony," he said.

"Roy, how do you do."

"What it is," Roy said. The big fellow now had his handshake-hand behind his neck and was pretending to feel the back of his neck, which Erdedy didn\'t know was a blatant dis.

"Well Roy, if I may call you Roy, or Mr. Tony, if you prefer, unless it\'s a compound first name, hyphenated, |Roy-Tony,\' and then a last name, but well with respect to this hugging thing, Roy, it\'s nothing personal, rest assured."

"Rest assured?"

Erdedy\'s best helpless smile and an apologetic shrug of the Goretex anorak. "I\'m afraid I just don\'t particularly like to hug. Just not a hugger. Never have been. It was something of a joke among my fam - "

Now the ominous finger-pointing of street aggression, this Roy fellow pointing first at Erdedy\'s chest and then at his own: "So man what you say you saying I\'m a hugger? You say you think I go around like to hug?"

Both Erdedy\'s hands were now up palms-out and waggling in the white-collar gesture of heading off all possible misunderstanding: "No no no but see the whole point is that I wouldn\'t presume to call you either a hugger or a non-hugger, because I don\'t know you. I only meant to say it\'s nothing personal having to do with you as an individual, and I\'d be more than happy to shake hands, even one of those complex multiple-handed Afro-American handshakes if you\'ll bear with my inexperience with that sort of handshake, but I\'m simply uncomfortable with the whole idea of hugging."

By the time Johnette Foltz could break away and get over to them, the fellow had Erdedy by his anorak\'s insulated lapels and was leaning him way back over the edge of the literature table so that Erdedy\'s waterproof lodge boots were off the ground, and the fellow\'s face was right up in Erdedy\'s face in a show of naked blue-collar aggression:

"You think I fucking like to go around hug on folks? You think any of us like this shit? We fucking do what they tell us. They tell us Hugs Not Drugs in here. We done fucking surrendered our wills in here. You addled little faggot," he said. Pointing at himself meant he was now holding Erdedy off the ground with just one hand, which fact was not lost on Erdedy\'s nervous system. Roy Tony wedged his hand between them to point at himself "I done had to give four hugs my first night here and then I gone ran in the fucking can and fucking puked. Puked," he said. "Not comfortable? Who the fuck are you? Don\'t even try and tell me I\'m coming over feeling comfortable about trying to hug on your James-River-Traders-wearing-Calvin-Klein-aftershave-smelling-goofy-ass ass."

One of the Afro-American women who was looking on clapped her hands and shouted "Talk about it!"

"And now you go and disrespect me in front of my whole clean and sober set just when I gone risk sharing my vulnerability and uncomfort with you?"

Johnette Foltz was sort of pawing at the back of Roy Tony\'s fatigue jacket, shuddering mentally at how the report of an Ennet House resident assaulted at an NA meeting she\'d personally brought him to would look written up in the staff log.

"Now," Roy said, extracting his free hand and pointing to the vestry floor with a stabbing gesture. "Now," he said, "you gone risk vulnerability and uncomfort and hug my ass, or do I fucking rip your head off and shit down your neck?"

Johnette Folu had hold of the Roy fellow\'s coat now with both hands and was trying to pull the fellow off, her Keds scrabbling for purchase on the smooth parquet, saying "Yo Roy T. man, easy there dude, man, esse, posse, crew, homes, "brother, he\'s just too new is all"; but by this time Erdedy had both his arms around the guy\'s neck and was hugging him with such vigor Kate Gompert later said it looked like Erdedy was trying to climb him.
Masturbation in the MFA