Wallace follows his debut novel (The Broom of the System, 1986)
with this collection of nine stories and a John Barthian novella.
The best of the pieces, often drawn from the media or topical
events, are inventive, entertaining, and inspired, while others -
including the novella - can be all too glib and mannered. "Little
Expressionless Animals" (which received the 1988 John Train Humor
Prize from the Paris Review) is a zany, fast-paced romp through
la-la land: Julie, a bleached-blonde lesbian with an idiot-savant
brother, lives through a three-year winning streak on Jeopardy.
Wallace - along with the reader - has a great deal of fun with
backstage politics and a media-inspired hysteria that wrecks
people. Meanwhile, the title story turns Less Than Zero into
parody: a young Republican hangs out with a group of L.A. punks
(Gimlet, Big, and Mr. Wonderful) at a Keith Jarrett concert - the
tale is tantalizing in its facility with its milieu (here,
Wallace's feverish prose finds a fitting subject) and even the
expected stylized violence at the end outflanks cliche In "My
Appearance," an anxious actress narrates the antics surrounding her
appearance on The David Letterman Show. While there is a little too
much media analysis (Wallace is fatally fixated at times on
superficial forms of glamour), there is also some good satire.
After those three stories, however, the pickings grow thin:
"Lyndon" is a predictable, too facile mock-memoir about LBJ written
by an aide and shot through with quotes about the former President,
while "Here and There" and "Westward the Course of Empire Takes its
Way" (the novella) are jargon-ridden, archly metafictional, and too
clever for their own good: the novella, especially, is surprisingly
jejune. In all, the work of a prodigious but still developing
talent too much impressed with his own gifts and with some current
critical theory. (Kirkus Reviews)
Girl with Curious Hair is replete with David Foster Wallace's
remarkable and unsettling reimaginations of reality. From the
eerily "real," almost holographic evocations of historical figures
like Lyndon Johnson and overtelevised game-show hosts and
late-night comedians to the title story, where terminal punk
nihilism meets Young Republicanism, Wallace renders the incredible
comprehensible, the bizarre normal, the absurd hilarious, the
familiar strange.
General
Imprint: |
W W Norton & Co Inc
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Release date: |
August 1996 |
First published: |
February 1996 |
Authors: |
David Foster Wallace
|
Dimensions: |
209 x 138 x 23mm (L x W x T) |
Format: |
Paperback
|
Pages: |
373 |
ISBN-13: |
978-0-393-31396-3 |
Categories: |
Books >
Fiction >
General & literary fiction >
Modern fiction
|
LSN: |
0-393-31396-4 |
Barcode: |
9780393313963 |
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