Oblivion Stories
FictionLiterary

Oblivion Stories

by David Foster Wallace

Publisher
Little, Brown
Pages
336
Language
English
Published
2004-06-08

Overview

<b>In the stories that make up <i>Oblivion</i>, David Foster Wallace joins the rawest, most naked humanity with the infinite involutions of self-consciousness--a combination that is dazzlingly, uniquely his. </b><br>These are worlds undreamt of by any other mind. Only David Foster Wallace could convey a father's desperate loneliness by way of his son's daydreaming through a teacher's homicidal breakdown ("The Soul Is Not a Smithy"). Or could explore the deepest and most hilarious aspects of creativity by delineating the office politics surrounding a magazine profile of an artist who produces miniature sculptures in an anatomically inconceivable way ("The Suffering Channel"). Or capture the ache of love's breakdown in the painfully polite apologies of a man who believes his wife is hallucinating the sound of his snoring ("Oblivion"). <br>Each of these stories is a complete world, as fully imagined as most entire novels, at once preposterously surreal and painfully immediate.

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