Author Archives: Martin

The New Yorker Pays Tribute to David Foster Wallace

Martin Schneider writes:
On the New Yorker website, fiction editor Deborah Treisman contributes a thoughtful postscript about David Foster Wallace. I particularly like that Treisman discusses Wallace from her perspective as a fiction editor. He made ample reference in his footnotes to his bouts of intractability when it came to having his work edited, and the glimpses Treisman permits us into that process sound very consistent with that.
Wallace’s four works published in The New Yorker are also available:
“Several Birds,” June 27, 1994
“An Interval,” January 30, 1995
“Asset,” June 21, 1999
“Good People,” February 5, 2007

The Wavy Rule, a Daily Comic by Paul Morris: Self Expression

Today’s installment is particularly delicious and cunning. Don’t forget that the spontaneity drills begin at 3 p.m. today sharp. Click to enlarge!
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More by Paul Morris: “The Wavy Rule” archive; “Arnjuice,” a wistful, funny webcomic; a smorgasbord at Flickr; and beautifully off-kilter cartoon collections for sale (and free download) at Lulu.

The Wavy Rule, a Daily Comic by Paul Morris: Prince Fielder

About today’s installment, Paul writes:
Claudia Roth Pierpont’s profile on Machiavelli in the latest issue of The New Yorker explores the man and his reputation. Has his reputation for cruelty been justified? What would Machiavelli have made of the current state of American politics?
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More by Paul Morris: “The Wavy Rule” archive; “Arnjuice,” a wistful, funny webcomic; a smorgasbord at Flickr; and beautifully off-kilter cartoon collections for sale (and free download) at Lulu.

Guillermo del Toro Added to New Yorker Festival

Tickets go on sale two days from today, this Wednesday, September 17. Here are the full details, from the press release:
Guillermo del Toro
talks with Daniel Zalewski
On monsters.
Guillermo del Toro wrote, directed, and produced the 2006 film “Pan’s
Labyrinth,” which won three Academy Awards and became the
highest-grossing Spanish-language film in U.S. box-office history. His
other films include “Cronos,” “The Devil’s Backbone,” “Blade II,”
“Hellboy,” and “Hellboy II: The Golden Army.” His next project will be
a two-film adaptation of J. R. R. Tolkien’s “The Hobbit,” to be
released in 2011 and 2012.
Daniel Zalewski is the features editor of The New Yorker.
Saturday, October 4th, at 7:30 P.M.
Directors Guild of America
110 West 57th Street
($35)
Tickets available Wednesday, September 17th, at 12 noon E.T., at
festival.newyorker.com or by calling 800-440-6974. Tickets will also
be sold during Festival weekend at Festival HQ, at Metropolitan
Pavilion, 125 West 18th Street, and at the door.

David Foster Wallace, 1962-2008

Martin Schneider writes:
Wow. This is very, very, very, very sad. Wallace was one of my very favorite writers, and I’m devastated that he’s gone, of suicide, at the young age of 46. I value his essays and journalism as much as anything written since 1990 or so. The one about the cruise, the one about McCain, the one about Michael Joyce…. top marks, all, and so many others. His work wasn’t for everyone, but I really took to it. He made the literary landscape more special than almost anyone I can think of.
One day in 2005, I noticed that his Wikipedia page was practically empty. Consternated, I proceeded to contribute about ten moderately feverish paragraphs of questionable accuracy attempting to summarize his work to date. There was a lot wrong with it, and subsequent Wikipedia editors were neither slow nor shy in undoing some of my more intemperate remarks. That page has changed a lot, but I was the first to give it a skeleton. In a very small and inconsequential way, I’m proud to have played a role in the public perception of this very special writer.
I saw him read once, at the Union Square Barnes and Noble in support of Brief Interviews with Hideous Men (he was incredibly entertaining) and afterward I lined up to get a book inscribed. A very thrifty friend of mine had brought a battered hardback of Infinite Jest, recently thrown out of the Newark Library System, and Wallace engaged in a little banter about that. I happened to have a Robert Coover novel with me, and rather flippantly handed it to him to sign; in his hyper-scrupulous way, he made it plain that he could not in good conscience put his name in a book by another writer. (I’m an idiot.) Instead he inscribed my copy of Brief Interviews with Hideous Men. I’ll never forget that chilly blast of ethics; it still reminds me of his essayistic voice.
In the Wikipedia link above, readers will notice that I pursue an extended comparison between Wallace and Norman Mailer. I’ve put it out there a few times, and I think nobody really agrees with me, but I still think it has legs. Experimental writer of “big” ambitious fiction capable of sublime passages of ten or fifty pages; journalist of genius. That describes both men; how unspeakably horrible to lose both within the space of a year.
A few years ago I started a small collection of original periodicals containing Wallace articles; it’s so upsetting that they have become true collector’s items so soon.
Update: Those who (like myself) find themselves separated from their collection of Wallace’s writings may be eager to know where they can get some online. I know of three complete works to read, and most of one to listen to.
His 2001 overview of the “usage wars,” which appeared in Harper’s, can be read here.
His 2004 article about the ethics of consuming lobster, which appeared in Gourmet magazine, can be read here (PDF).
His 2005 essay about a conservative radio host, which appeared in The Atlantic Monthly, can be read here.
I don’t think many people are aware of this, but there is an excellent podcast of Wallace reading from his article about 9/11 that appeared in Rolling Stone right after the tragic event. That podcast can be found in iTunes under “KCET podcast: Hammer Conversations.”

Mankoff Denies Knowledge of Lithgow, Claims Nobel Prize

Martin Schneider writes:
Something in the New York Observer that does not go by the name of “Transom” has a nice piece by Leon Neyfakh about Bob Miller’s new HarperStudio project, that remarkably ambitious effort to jettison the outdated publishing techniques of large advances and the practice of taking on remaindered copies you might have heard about. (I’m all for this stuff, by the way.)
In the piece, we learn that:

The most eye-catching title on the list is probably the collection of short, unpublished humor pieces by Mark Twain, which will be out in April. Other notable books in the mix: a memoir by 3rd Rock From the Sun star John Lithgow, a history of humor by New Yorker cartoon editor Bob Mankoff, and a Toni Morrison-edited collection called Burn This Book, about “the power of the word,” that will feature pieces by her, Salman Rushdie, Orhan Pamuk, David Grossman, and others.

Emdashes salutes Mankoff’s third billing in this paragraph (beat out Morrison!) and eagerly awaits the book; it sounds like a pip.

You Know This Already, But Ian Parker Nailed It

Martin Schneider writes:
What do you think of the notion that Ian Parker’s Profile of Alec Baldwin may be the most successful Profile of recent years? It’s been cited all over the place, and everyone seems delighted with it. I think it’s penetrated an unusually wide audience for New Yorker fare, and since it’s kind of awesome, that’s a good thing. Am I wrong on this? Are there any other contenders? What are they?

The Wavy Rule, a Daily Comic by Paul Morris: Allen Wrench

Here are Paul’s thoughts on today’s installment. (And here is David Denby’s review of Vicky Cristina Barcelona.) As always, click to enlarge.
Will women vote for John McCain because his running mate is a woman? (McCain’s matrimonial mate is also a woman.) That is the question. I was hoping that for once, we’d have a dignified election about the issues, but it doesn’t look it’s going to come to pass, what with lipstick on a pig, mooseburgers, and hockey moms. We haven’t changed all that much from the unsophisticated days of “Tippecanoe and Tyler too.” So much for “change.”
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More by Paul Morris: “The Wavy Rule” archive; “Arnjuice,” a wistful, funny webcomic; a smorgasbord at Flickr; and beautifully off-kilter cartoon collections for sale (and free download) at Lulu.