A Supposedly Fun Thing I’ll Never Do Again, by David Foster Wallace
Posted: August 10, 2004 at 3:58 pm in fun_nonfiction ~ Permalink ~ TrackBack

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Several people have highly recommended to me Wallace’s novel,
Infinite Jest, but I’ve been too intimidated by its 1000 page length (of which 300 pages are footnotes) to try it. But when I saw a collection of his essays in the used bookstore, I figured that might be a way to ease in and see if I liked his writing style. And the verdict? I do.

Wallace is a highly talented writer and observer. The book consists of seven essays, written for a variety of magazines about a variety of events, ranging from a tennis tournament to the Illinois State Fair to a Caribbean Cruise. Wallace does a great job of focusing in on the absurdities of a situation, and why we react the way we do. Or at least on why he reacts the way he does. And he writes beautifully (or belletristically, as he would say - he’s one of the few writers in the last ten years for whom I had to use a dictionary). His style does tend to be verbose - the essay on a one week Caribbean Cruise is 100 pages, with pages devoted to insignificant details like the design of the portholes, or the various machinery in his bathroom. But it’s consistently interesting. I especially like his ruminations on the atmosphere of forced fun (with an attitude like We’ve paid to have a fun-filled active vacation, and by golly, we’re going to have one). I also found the footnotes to be entertaining. As one who tends to go off on parenthetical digressions myself (gee, ya think?), I find his work to have lifted the digression to an art form, with footnotes that are often a page long themselves, with references to other footnotes.

A couple of the other essays reveal his deep grounding in postmodern philosophy and critical theory. Actually, all of the essays do, but particularly in the one meditating on the role that television has played on the literary scene, the one that previews David Lynch’s film Lost Highway and reviews Lynch’s work, and, of course, the one reviewing a book that is a survey of poststructuralist critical theory. Since I’m curious about postmodern theory, it was interesting to read his asides on the subject.

I also liked his essay about the tennis tournament, where he is following a tennis pro who’s trying to make The Leap to the top-ranked players - he’s 79th in the world at the time Wallace follows him. And yet, even to make it to that point, this player, Michael Joyce, has sacrificed his entire life, concentrating only on tennis since he was two years old (the essay title is a work of art itself - “Tennis Player Michael Joyce’s Professional Artistry as a Paradigm of Certain Stuff about Choice, Freedom, Discipline, Joy, Grotesquerie, and Human Completeness”). It actually reflects things I’ve been thinking a lot about myself, which is the tension between trying a lot of different things but being mediocre at all of them, or focusing on one thing and getting really good at it, at the cost of not doing anything else. Michael Joyce (and all professional athletes really) are an example of the latter option, and Wallace makes it very clear what Joyce gave up to achieve what he has (hence the reference to “Grotesquerie” in the title). I lean towards the generalist approach currently, but in a world of increasing specialization, where you really have to focus in on something for 20 years to be able to do anything of note, is there really a place for the generalist any more? This is probably fodder for another post at some point. When I’ve thought about it some more. Anyway.

Good stuff. Thoughtful. Well written. I’ll be looking for copy of Infinite Jest at some point. I think it’ll entertain me.

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  1. Eric Nehrlich, Unrepentant Generalist || Nonfiction Roundup February 2007 || February || 2007 commented on February 24th, 2007 at 12:44 pm :

    [...] Despite widespread popular acclaim, I was not able to get through more than the first 50 pages of The Corrections the one time I picked it up from the library. So when I saw this short book of essays from Jonathan Franzen at the library, I figured I would give it a try to see if it enticed me into trying the bigger book, much like I did by first reading David Foster Wallace’s essays before tackling Infinite Jest. Alas, I was unimpressed by the essays - they were reasonably well-written, but didn’t have any defining characteristics, such as the dazzling wordplay of Wallace or the humor of David Sedaris. So I’ll move on to other authors. [...]

  2. Eric Nehrlich, Unrepentant Generalist || Instant Community and Values || August || 2004 commented on April 22nd, 2007 at 9:47 pm :

    [...] One of the things that I don’t like about either of these communities (sports or churches) is that they seem too superficial to me. This comes back to a theory that a friend of mine proposed of “reality coefficients” (1) (yes, I couldn’t resist using a David Foster Wallace-style footnote). Our reality coefficients align in a small way via sports or a church, but it restricts interactions to a really shallow level. And for some people, that might be what they’re looking for. But I’m looking for more, because I’ve had it in the past, with a community of friends that I felt like I could talk to about almost everything. And I’m no longer willing to settle for anything less. Which may make me a snob. Anyway. [...]

  3. Eric Nehrlich, Unrepentant Generalist || Identity as context || February || 2005 commented on May 23rd, 2007 at 8:23 am :

    [...] still an effect. For instance, I know my writing became more florid for a while after I read David Foster Wallace, with lines like “In our world of postmodern ironic world-weariness, something about the buzz [...]

  4. JE commented on August 1st, 2007 at 4:12 pm :

    I just saw Michael Joyce hitting with Maria yesterday. There were a few heated moments when Uri and Maria came to the net to discuss the strategy Michael wanted Maria to employ. I couldn’t help think about how great it must be to coach the best and how awfully precarious his position is. Was this focus on only tennis, that now has Michael in this position, fulfilling or depressing — or a little of both?

  5. Eric Nehrlich, Unrepentant Generalist || Generalist || October || 2004 commented on September 16th, 2008 at 9:41 pm :

    [...] Stuff about Choice, Freedom, Discipline, Joy, Grotesquerie, and Human Completeness” in his book of essays. And I’m not willing to make that commitment. To [...]

 

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