
The David Foster Wallace Reader
Reviews

After having never read a single word of DFW before this year, I spent about six months reading some of his best work, and I really enjoyed the experience. For one, the format is great. After reading samples of every one of DFW's fiction books, I have a good sense of the ones I'll definitely pick up (IJ, Oblivion) and the ones I won't (Pale King, Oblivion). The non-fiction essays are all great (favorites were Authority and American Usage, which is somehow more relevant today than it was when it was published, The View from Mrs. Thompson's, can and - of course - A Supposedly Fun Thing I Won't Do Again), though some selections from his book-length non-fiction would've been nice. And finally, the lecture notes are a fascinating little curiosity - and a sweet window into Wallace's relationship with his mom - that would never get collected if this book was put together by a dispassionate academic. More authors who perhaps aren't suited to the full Library of America treatment could benefit from an anthology like this.
