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Oblivion Paperback | Pages: 329 pages
Rating: 4.07 | 11965 Users | 858 Reviews

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Title:Oblivion
Author:David Foster Wallace
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:First Edition
Pages:Pages: 329 pages
Published:August 30th 2005 by Back Bay Books (first published June 8th 2004)
Categories:Short Stories. Fiction. Literature. American

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Otto romanzi brevi in cui Wallace gioca felicemente fra le macerie della realtà, aprendo nuove vie, nella scelta sia del tema come della forma più originale e sorprendente. Personaggi descritti nelle loro angosce e allucinazioni, scavati fino a zone inesplorate della psiche e della carne, senza mai la benché minima concessione a psicologismi o verismo di maniera. Dal giovane di successo consapevole di essere un impostore, condannato a smascherarsi o ad annientarsi, al pluriomicida che di fronte alla cecità degli altri si scatenerà in un college. Oltre le singole storie, questo libro mostra che la letteratura può arrivare al cuore marcio della società e spalancarci il corpo martoriato, eppure così normale, della nostra vita quotidiana.

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Original Title: Oblivion
ISBN: 0316010766 (ISBN13: 9780316010764)
Edition Language: English

Rating About Books Oblivion
Ratings: 4.07 From 11965 Users | 858 Reviews

Criticism About Books Oblivion
Very uneven, though I love DFW with a deep and abiding passion, it must be said that not all that glitters is necessarily gold...about half the stories are experimental airballs and the other half are uniquely powerful, beautiful and inimitable. The Good: Mister Squishy Another Pioneer The Soul Is Not A Smithy The Bad: Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature Oblivion The Suffering Channel Incarnations of Buried Children The Amazing, Brilliant and Powerful: Good Old Neon I do treasure my copy,

If nothing else, this book really made me think. Maybe even over-think. This book invites it. There is a lot to mull over in each of these stories, and DFW is very rarely direct about anything, preferring to leave clues along the way. I think its interesting that each story has its own specific vocabulary and/or verbal tics from Mister Squishy's ad agency lingo to Oblivions strange use of latin/pace/'air-quotes' to Suffering Channels magazine-speak; its almost as if the characters in one story

Kind of a mixed bag. The first couple of stories--"Mr. Squishy" and "The Soul Is Not A Smithy"--felt like a bit of a chore, and I don't know that I really understood what Wallace was trying to get at in either of them. The book's title story was also underwhelming. And yet, a mixed bag for Wallace is of a higher quality than what most writers produce at their best. "Good Old Neon" particularly was a profoundly affecting and evocative piece. I needed to go outside and have a smoke and go to sleep

David Foster Wallace is a literary stylist, and one can dislike his style without denying the fact that he is an outstanding writer. While reading Oblivion, my opinion of this style was constantly switching. Sometimes I was reading something brilliant, transcendent, which in both language and perspective captured perfectly and beautifully the essence of his subject. However the greater part of the experience was one of pure tedium. Wallace does like to go on and on and on, about every minute

The views expressed in this review are mine and do not represent those of the educated. I probably misinterpreted every story in Oblivion - but it's too late to get smarter now.Mister Squishy - Read Mister Squishy whilst telling yourself this laborious exercise will be worthwhile, knowing full well youre kidding yourself. Seriously, it was like reading html. I had Myspace flashbacks.The Soul Is Not A Smithy -You know when youre watching a film in the cinema and the last twenty minutes has been

People Prefer Electric Shock to Thinking: Study was the way they put it in the New York Post only a few days ago. Whether these click- and tenure-bait studies are worth the time and energy it takes read about them is an excellent question, but assuming that this particular one is, the world reaction could probably be divided into two categories: non-readers of DF Wallace, and readers of same. The former may have snorted derisively, rolled their eyes, or lamented (silently or aloud) the state of

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