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Oblivion: Stories
 
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Oblivion: Stories (Hardcover)

by David Foster Wallace (Author)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
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Books in Canada

Modernism, the tradition David Foster Wallace belongs to with what used to be called a vengeance, was supposed to have been wiped away long ago by Postmodernism, with its shifting styles and its deadpan assurances that surface is depth and skin is just another way of saying soul. Samuel Beckett and Andy Warhol, and the last century’s presiding genius, Marcel Duchamp, were the gray eminences of the new tradition. They shrugged away the Moderns’ ghosthunter humanism, their hungry hearts, their wager that well-arranged words could revive cities (Ulysses), capture thought as it passed through the wobbly glass of its own reflection (The Waves), and make eerie tintypes of the past’s glow-y litter in the present (The Waste Land).
Both traditions attracted virtuosos by the score. No Modern topped Joyce for wit and word invention (“strandentwining cable of all flesh” is one of many in Ulysses), and for many years now Thomas Pynchon’s bravura style has made the most interesting Postmodernism cocktail of pessimism and irony in the language. His characters and his sentences shape and re-shape themselves on the pages until they pull back the curtain on the world-culture, mind-exposing it as a Moebius-strip loop about junk and godlessness, the infinite a mute figure within the finite.
David Foster Wallace’s past few books-Infinite Jest, A Supposedly Fun Thing I’ll Never Do Again, Brief Interviews with Hideous Men-carry echoes of Joyce’s supple authorial gaze as well as Pynchon’s polymorphous roll through cultural detritus. The presiding consciousness in his stories twists anxiety and hysteria together in scenes that bulge with comedy, stream-of-conscious obsessions and spiritual paralysis. Often his stories seem to be mounting a grand mal moral seizure about the present world’s turn from logic, coherence and soul, but then they fade before going all the way. His sentences whirr and roar with scene-painting, ferociously accumulated layers of data and detail that seem to want to fill in the world that is being so comically analyzed as empty.
The first story, “Mister Squishy”, is a good example of the sort of ekphrastic that Wallace specializes in. In its sixty-five pages the story inventories an astonishing number of material and psychological specifics that are part of the launch of a new snack cake. Set in the upper floor of a skyscraper, in 1995, a jittery facilitator from “Team ?y”, a “cutting-edge market research firm,” moves his focus group to the final phase of an interview that includes sampling the new “chocolate-intensive” version of the familiar Mister Squishy cake, and the chance for the group to discuss the product in the facilitator’s absence. The story bristles with a Photo Realist satire that is captured in the moment when the narrator reveals what the new cake is: “The dark and exceptionally dense and moist-looking snack cakes inside the packaging were Felonies®-a risky and multivalent trade name meant both to connote and to parody the modern health-conscious consumer’s sense of vice/indulgence/transgression/sin vis á vis the consumption of a high-calorie corporate snack.” This is the Wallace style in brief: the logician’s razoring of concepts, the auto-didact’s motor mouth, the deconstructionist’s zeal to expose.
“Mister Squishy” is a classic Pynchon lose-lose proposition: By holding a magnifying glass up to a scene whose center (selling moist cake) is part of-we can guess-the problem with the American soul, Wallace gives us a space that is utterly empty of meaning, even after he fills it up with the intimate details of the facilitator’s fantasy life, the hierarchies of power within the advertising firm and-small drum roll-the fact that Wallace (a fictional Wallace?) is a stealth member of the Focus Group, a member of Team ?y pulled in to ensure that the millions spent on marketing the new cake will confirm what the company wanted to be true about its product. (There is also the little joke that Team ?y must be pronounced “Team Die.”) In the final turn, the story reminds us that 1995 is a pivotal, prelapsarian year innocent of cyberspace’s potential for pooling fine-grain details about individual buying habits. A final scene brushes out a cinematic encounter between a younger member of Team ?y, who sees this future and another, larger man, who imagines only the younger man’s erasure. Finally, its conclusion turns into a strange, Jacobean Death of a Salesman in which the Willy Loman is the nervous fantasist whose life is in the hands of shadowy, would-be entrepreneurs who circle each other in a final endgame of their own devising.
Infinite Jest’s bulging Rabelasian satire was built on the central trope of a film that gave its viewers a bliss so fine that they abandoned everything for the pursuit of repeated viewings of it. The stories in Oblivion carry that forward, showing more than one character enchanted by images. Indeed, the new snack cake is a governing trope for the collection and for Wallace’s concern: the cake for the masses is ultimately being guided into the market as an image.
Intoxication with images forms a core part of the second story too. “The Soul is Not a Smithy” is a comic memoir of an elementary classroom just before and after a hostage taking. While a substitute teacher leads the class in a math lesson, our narrator describes, in immense detail, how he would spend his school days “story boarding” the scenes that appeared and disappeared in the glass windows that ran on the outside wall of the class. The scenes are lurid and violent: two dogs mate and get stuck together; a neighbor appears to lose his hand in a snow blower’s blades. When the teacher enters a psychotic episode and writes “KILL, KILL” on the board you wonder whether the substitute teacher and the boy share mental screens. Do they both have radar that is picking up the bloody and dreamlike world of images outside the classroom?
In “Oblivion”, a stressed-out narrator takes the opportunity of a rain delay in a golf game with his stepfather-in-law to broach the subject of his wife’s “severe sleep disturbance,” which has led her, beyond logic (the narrator believes), to accuse him of snoring and keeping her awake at night. In his own sleep-deprivation, the narrator now finds himself haunted by tableaux hovering before him: “travelers are hurrying laterally past the row of phones. . . while the telephone, which remains at the center of the view of the scene or tableau, rings on and on, persistently. . . .” Eventually, a long scene in a sleep clinic reveals both husband and wife to be in a complicated relationship to each other’s sleeping and dreaming selves.
Wallace’s genius for anatomizing convoluted contemporary situations is large, but such staggeringly complete inquiries into characters’ thoughts and meta-thoughts, his massing of the mobile vectors of intent and trajectory in situations, brings a numbing sensory overload with them. (In this way his stories, I want to suggest, are a little like exceptionally smart-talking malls, if malls could talk.) The downside of all this brilliance is that future generations might read Wallace the way we read a work like Burton’s Anatomy of Melancholy, which we call masterful but then leave on the shelf. Like Burton, Wallace diagnoses the culture: his anatomy of the American soul suggests a condition of profound displacement, the coming on of a metastasizing fissure between the people we think we are and the people we say we are. The implied melancholy in the gap is Wallace’s most un-Postmodern annunciation.
Lyall Bush (Books in Canada)


From Publishers Weekly

In his best work, Infinite Jest, Wallace leavened his smartest-boy-in-class style, perfected in his essays and short stories, with a stereoscopic reproduction of other voices. Wallace's trademark, however, is an officious specificity, typical of the Grade A student overreaching: shifting levels of microscopic detail and self-reflection. This collection of eight stories highlights both the power and the weakness of these idiosyncrasies. The best story in the book, "Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature," assembles a typical Wallaceian absurdity: a paroled, autodidactic arachnophile accompanies his mother, the victim of plastic surgery malpractice ("the cosmetic surgeon botched it and did something to the musculature of her face which caused her to look insanely frightened at all times"), on a bus ride to a lawyer's office. "The Suffering Channel" moves from the grotesque to the gross-out, as a journalist for Style (a celebrity magazine) pursues a story about a man whose excrement comes out as sculpture. The title story, about a man and wife driven to visit a sleep clinic, is narrated by the husband, who soon reveals himself to be the tedious idiot his father-in-law takes him for. While this collection may please Wallace's most rabid fans, others will be disappointed that a writer of so much talent seems content, this time around, to retreat into a set of his most overused stylistic quirks.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Customer Reviews

12 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.2 out of 5 stars (12 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3.0 out of 5 stars Is it just me, or..., Jul 16 2004
By John A Wright "Lover of Books N' Beer" (Cincinnati, OH United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
... do others see an unfortunate emerging stagger in David Foster Wallace's experiments in free-wheeling prose?

I may be totally wrong in my theoretical problem with Oblivion; given the extreme level of reader interest and cooperation that DFW's stories and novels require, I can't be certain that I'm not just one of the other dufuses who just plain DONT GET HIM. I have tried, however, and am proud to place Infinite Jest in my top ten favorite novels list (I actually read that monster twice! Woof!)

So here goes: my theory is that the most fundamental "Jest" in Infinite Jest is the lack of resolution of the story and the myriad plotlines. If you manage to plow through the dense but enjoyable prose, you are actually pretty engaged in the plights of the dozen or so demi-protagonists, and actively speculating to yourself what the resolution will be. DFW actively encourages this, to the extent that ultimate denoument for Hal, Don and the Veiled lady is denied; in other words, you have to actively put the non-chronological pieces of the puzzle together in your mind, because it ain't spelled out for you in the manner that most of us (quite reasonably) expect from thier fiction. The joke, in other words, is on the reader, because the reader has to actively participate in the conclusion of the story in order to "get it;" and in the end, there is no difinitve answer to the question "What the hell actually happend to...?" so the jest is effectively infinite.

Ugh, I know, that's a chewy mouthful of an opening paragraph, but I'll wrap this up quickly. Oblivion uses this device so frequently in the short stories that it inspires frustration, rather than awe at the author's story-telling acumen. DFW repeatedly sets up mesmerising plots with his trademark narrative quirks (footnotes, three-page long sentences, metafictional third-wall breaking etc.) but denies the reader a tidy ending. Despite the fact that the intent reader can see the ending coming, DFW habitually denies the reader of this convenient pleasure.

I continue to be amazed by DFW's intellect, style, and breadth of subject matter, but I'm really getting frustrated with the meta-fictional crap. David, write a novel for God's sake. Or stick with the non-fiction that you do so so very well (Everything and More, his "compact history" of infinity is the genre-bending tour de force that you expect it to be -- check it out.) Or, if you insist on focusing on short stories, think up some new tricks. Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me. Shame, shame on me.

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3.0 out of 5 stars Wallace lets loose the dogs of war, Jul 14 2004
The sentence is possibly the most basic grammatical tool used by writers, a standard format by which information is conveyed to a reader. But there are sentences, and there are SENTENCES, and American author David Foster Wallace most indeed writes SENTENCES.

These are sentences that defy easy categorization - sensational amalgams of disparate thoughts and hidden meaning. These are sentences that push the boundaries of both style and length, wherein the format itself is as important as the content.

When they work, the result is breathtaking in its audacity and verve. With sentences as perfect as "the angle of his shoulders as he leaned into the door had the same quality of his eyes," Wallace truly earns the accolades he had accumulated.

Be forewarned: reading Wallace can be exhausting. He makes you work. And in Oblivion, his uneven collection of short stories, the rampaging prose overwhelms everything else in its path.

Wallace is in the higher ranks of modern writers, often mentioned in the same breath with postmodernist icons Thomas Pynchon and Don DeLillo. His award-winning prose, most vibrantly on display in his mountainous bestseller Infinite Jest, takes modernist techniques to their most extreme, threading themes and motifs in an artificially self-conscious style that is now Wallace's trademark.

With Oblivion, Wallace presents a bewildering display of bizarre narratives, each notable for never once treading familiar roads. A boy daydreams his father's existence while a teacher slowly goes insane. A man recounts his suicide. A husband goes to great lengths to prove he does not snore.

In the very funny "The Suffering Channel", Wallace tackles "the paradoxical intercourse of audience and celebrity." While a magazine editor anguishes over how to correctly market an artist of magical faecal manifestations, a television executive takes reality television to its logical next step, wondering, "How far along the final arc would Slo Mo High Def Full Sound Celebrity Defecation be?"

Wallace's overall style, when it works, captures those moments and thoughts "that flash through your head so fast that [italics] flash isn't even the right word, they seem totally different from or outside of the regular sequential clock time we all live by and they have so little relation to the sort of non-linear, one-word-after-another-word English we all communicate with each other with that it could easily take a whole lifetime just to spell out the contents of one split-second's flash of thoughts and connections, etc."

Yet unlike the brilliant stories in Brief Interviews with Hideous Men, which manage to combine his manic vigour with subtle restraint, Oblivion ultimately never satisfies. Many of the tales trail off to nothing, their ultimate arguments lost in the raging sea of Wallace's text. Oblivion displays all of the worst tendencies of an author lost to his talent, refusing to reign himself in, running roughshod over the page.

In the end, Oblivion functions best as a Wallace primer. If his convoluted expressions exhilarate the reader, Wallace's better works beckon. If, however, the reader is confounded more than engaged, tackling his Infinite Jest may seem like just that.

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3.0 out of 5 stars An Acquired Taste, Jul 9 2004
By Grady Harp (Los Angeles, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 100 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
David Foster Wallace is a unique writer and has developed a following who seem enchanted with the emperor's new clothes. That is in no way a put-down: there are many writers who have a style of writing that appeals to certain readers and not others, and that does not discount those writers' gifts. For example, there are many readers who have yet to wade through all the volumes of Marcel Proust's "A la Recherche du Temps Perdu (In Search of Lost Time)," or have struggled through James Joyce's "Ulysses" or "Finnegan's Wake" , or have been frustrated with TS Eliot's phrasing, Virginia Wolff's and Gertrude Stein's styles, etc. My frustration with reading David Foster Wallace in general, and OBLIVION in particular, is that it all seems so self indulgent. Yes, we all love to be challenged into following thought lines that meander for pages, sometimes as a single sentence, if the thought pursued is additive. Wallace is obviously bright and is most assuredly clever and can write hilarious insights into the foibles of living in 2004. Some of these stories are uncommonly terse and complete: "Incarnations of Burned Children" is a masterpiece of short story development in a matter of a few dense pages. But for the most part, for this reader, Wallace puts us on a roller coaster ride that feels more like an intellectual sideshow gag than one concerned with a story. "Mister Squishy" is more a novella that just doesn't seem to know how to get where it wants to go. Yes, a healthy dollop of patience and indulgence and extended periods of time will uncover some excellent wordsmithing, but Wallace is an acquired taste. I just haven't acquired it.
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Most recent customer reviews

1.0 out of 5 stars More Infinite Crap
This book works well with stupid people who like feeling smart by reading things they cannot comprehend. Read more
Published on Jul 11 2004

5.0 out of 5 stars absolutely amazing
i'm a big david foster wallace fan and have read all of his other works. this one is my favorite so far (in a very tight race with Infinte Jest). Read more
Published on Jul 5 2004 by Karin S. Chenowith

4.0 out of 5 stars I Haven't Read It Either--But That's Not The Point Is It?
I haven't read this book yet either---but I work in a library and I'm 1st on the HOLD List whenever they get the dang title processed. Read more
Published on Jul 1 2004 by Bob Sawatzki

4.0 out of 5 stars Much Better Than Brief Interviews and Girl w Curious Hair
If you think Mr. Squishy is "tedious and goes nowhere," you are just not going to enjoy this book. Read more
Published on Jun 15 2004 by A Partisan Wallace-Fan

4.0 out of 5 stars Calm down, people
There are some writers who it becomes fashionable to read and then, when they become too popular or widely praised, fashionable to put down. Read more
Published on Jun 4 2004 by Gulley Jimson

2.0 out of 5 stars B minus
Infinite Jest is an occasionally really good book and A Supposedly Fun Thing has two very great pieces and one story in Hideous Men (Forever Overhead) is just simply a little... Read more
Published on Jun 4 2004

3.0 out of 5 stars Keep a dictionary handy
Wallace has always written with the intention of trying to impress. His stories here are good, not great. Read more
Published on Jun 3 2004 by W. P. Strange

2.0 out of 5 stars More of the same
There are writers who engage almost solely a reader's intellect. There are also writers who engage almost solely a reader's possibility for emotional response (of course these... Read more
Published on Jun 2 2004

5.0 out of 5 stars Let's hope its not five more years
I had read the majority of these pieces in Esquire, Agni, McSweeney's, and Conjuctions, and was somewhat dissapointed that I would only have a few left over to read. Read more
Published on May 31 2004

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