David Foster Wallace | dragonfly editorial

dragonfly editorial

Archive for the ‘David Foster Wallace’ Category

Goodbye to David Foster Wallace

Monday, September 15th, 2008

My sister wrote this morning to tell me that David Foster Wallace had died. Found dead Friday night by his wife. He had apparently hanged himself.

Mr. Wallace was a writer so brilliant that I often felt that the back of my head was opening up when I read his words. I writer so talented that he could hold together about 14 different threads in the same nonfiction narrative–without confusing the reader one bit. Hearing about his death brings a feeling of sadness and dismay. Sadness at the loss of such a talent, in a time when talented writers aren’t that common. And dismay in realizing that I’ll never again be able to read another new essay by Mr. Wallace.

Here are a few reflections on his death:

New York Times

LA Times

Chicago Tribune

Entertainment Weekly

I also include a link to a David Foster Wallace essay near and dear to my own heart — his review of Bryan Garner’s Modern American Usage. If you want to do it proper, subscribe to Harper’s and download it from there. It’s well worth the $16.97.

Posted in Bryan Garner, David Foster Wallace | 1 comment »

David Foster Wallace on Bryan Garner

Friday, June 15th, 2007

Some of you (well, my mom) may know about my obsessions with David Foster Wallace and Bryan Garner. Wallace is an essayist (A Supposedly Fun Thing I’ll Never Do Again, Consider the Lobster) and fiction writer (e.g., Infinite Jest); Garner is the author of the definitive and comprehensive Garner’s Modern American Usage. The two men are very different writers, but both of their work is so good that it often gives me shivers when I read it.

Thus, I looked much like a Warner Bros. cartoon character (head spinning, steam coming out of ears, eyes popping) when I found this article from Harper’s Magazine–an extensive essay by Wallace about Garner and his Modern American Usage. It goes far in explaining Garner’s particular genius, putting his MAU in the context of a greater tradition of writing on the English language, and showing why he is such a masterful rhetorician.

An excerpt:

It’s now possible to see that all the autobiographical stuff in ADMAU’s Preface does more than just humanize Mr. Bryan A. Garner. It also serves to detail the early and enduring passion that helps make someone a credible technocrat — we tend to like and trust experts whose expertise is born of a real love for their specialty instead of just a desire to be expert at something. In fact, it turns out that ADMAU’s Preface quietly and steadily invests Garner with every single qualification of modern technocratic Authority: passionate devotion, reason, and accountability (recall “in the interests of full disclosure, here are the ten critical points …”), experience (”that, after years of working on usage problems, I’ve settled on”), exhaustive and tech-savvy research (”For contemporary usage, the files of our greatest dictionary makers pale in comparison with the fulltext search capabilities now provided by NEXIS and WESTLAW”), an even and judicious temperament (see e.g. this from HYPERCORRECTION: “Sometimes people strive to abide by the strictest etiquette, but in the process behave inappropriately”), and the sort of humble integrity (for instance, including in one of the entries a past published usage-error of his own) that not only renders Garner likable but transmits the same kind of reverence for English that good jurists have for the law, both of which are bigger and more important than any one person.

What can I say? Reading the essay was (one of) this girl’s dreams come true.

Posted in Bryan Garner, David Foster Wallace | 1 comment »

What do our clients think?

Press Releases

view archives

Latest Comments

  • Gary A. Hill: I bought my copy of Garner from Powell’s Books. I...
  • admin: I guess if you consider it to be part of the whole...
  • erika: I hope it’s not a fancy of way of saying: we want top-notch...