Episodes

Friday Oct 13, 2023
Episode 74 - David Lipsky, author of The Parrot and the Igloo
Friday Oct 13, 2023
Friday Oct 13, 2023
In this episode with speak with bestselling writer and journalist David Lipsky. To David Foster Wallace fans, Lipsky is, of course, familiar as the author of Although Of Course You End Up Becoming Yourself which was the basis of the 2015 film The End of the Tour.
David Lipsky is a contributing editor at Rolling Stone. His fiction and nonfiction have appeared in The New Yorker, Harper's, The Best American Short Stories, The Best American Magazine Writing, The New York Times, The New York Times Book Review, and many others. He contributes to NPR's All Things Considered, and is the recipient of a Lambert Fellowship, a Media Award from GLAAD, and a National Magazine Award. He's the author of the novel The Art Fair; a collection, Three Thousand Dollars; and the bestselling nonfiction book Absolutely American, which was a Time magazine Best Book of the Year.
His new book, The Parrot and the Igloo: Climate and the Science of Denial is out now from Norton. The book examines the roots of climate change in popular thought, reaching back to the invention of electricity and the global impacts of technology. Lipsky profiles the scientists and characters who have taken up climate science and those who work to deny the effects of carbon and warming.
The New York Times described the book, saying Lipsky "spins top-flight climate literature into cliffhanger entertainment."
The extensive notes to the book, which he mentions in this episode, can be found at https://www.theparrotandtheigloo.com/
(Thank you to Kory Hill for technical assistance.)

Monday Jan 23, 2023
Episode 71 - Year in Review 2022 with Evan Stephens Hall of Pinegrove
Monday Jan 23, 2023
Monday Jan 23, 2023
In this episode, we talk with prolific reader and accomplished musician Evan Stephens Hall from the band Pinegrove. We discuss his top books of the year and go through a few of our own favorite reading experiences from 2022.
Here is the David Foster Wallace & Richard Powers Q&A we mention.
The Pinegrove songs featured in this episode are Alaska and Habitat.
Thank you to Rough Trade Records, Pinegrove and Evan Stephens Hall for permission.
Here are our Concavity Show Best Songs of 2022 playlists:
iTunes: https://music.apple.com/ca/playlist/best-of-2022/pl.u-EdAVv5dCaMJB7j
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/1BwuTDJq2LoU8ZzdSDXSK5?si=052f5d25ed514b43
Evan, top books mentioned:
A Gathering of Old Men by Ernest J. Gaines (Gaines stamp!)
Morality Play by Barry Unsworth
Breakfast of Champions by Kurt Vonnegut
Public Library by Ali Smith (and Autumn!)
Breaking and Entering by Joy WIlliams
Leave Society by Tao Lin
Dave, top books mentioned:
Transcendent Kingdom by Yaa Gyaasi
Intimacies by Katie Kitamura
The Overstory by Richard Powers
Autoportrait by Jesse Ball
Liberation Day by George Saunders
Matt, top books read this year:
Robert Crews by Thomas Berger
Literary Alchemist by Steve Paul
We Keep the Dead Close by Becky Cooper
Airport Music by Mark Tardi
Zol by REYoung
Evan on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/evanstephenshall/
Pinegrove website: https://pinegroveband.com/
Contact Dave & Matt:
Email - concavityshow@gmail.com
Twitter - https://twitter.com/ConcavityShow
Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/concavityshow/
Patreon - https://www.patreon.com/concavityshow
Threadless Merch Store - https://concavityshow.threadless.com/

Monday Sep 18, 2017
Episode 31 - Discussing David Foster Wallace with Matt Luter
Monday Sep 18, 2017
Monday Sep 18, 2017
In this episode we speak with Matthew Luter, DFW scholar and author of Understanding Jonathan Lethem. https://www.sc.edu/uscpress/books/2015/7512.html
We discuss the state of DFW studies, academia, and Matt's paper at this year's DFW Conference. Matt's paper deals with, among other things, Rita Felski's work and Kevin Birmingham's book on Ulysses, "The Most Dangerous Book."
We also make mention of Sidney Peterson's 1947 experimental film "The Cage" which you can watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CXEW_ZCqWsc
You can follow Matt on Twitter at @matthewjluter.

Thursday May 11, 2017
Episode 28 - Discussing David Foster Wallace with Lucas Thompson
Thursday May 11, 2017
Thursday May 11, 2017
In this episode we are joined by Wallace scholar Lucas Thompson.
Lucas Thompson is the author of the new book Global Wallace (Bloomsbury) which is the first volume in a new series called "David Foster Wallace Studies" edited by Stephen Burn. Global Wallace centers around the often overlooked sources of influence on Wallace's work. Thompson explores Wallace's connection and borrowing from Manuel Puig, Dostoevsky, hip hop culture, and many others.
Thompson is a Research Fellow at the United States Studies Centre at the University of Sydney, Australia. He has published articles in Texas Studies in Literature and Language, Journal of American Studies, The Cormac McCarthy Journal, and Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction. Forthcoming book chapters appear in The Cambridge Companion to David Foster Wallace, MLA Approaches to Teaching: David Foster Wallace, and MLA Approaches to Teaching: Jewish American Fiction. His reviews have appeared in US Studies Online, The European Legacy, and Philament, and he has also written for The LA Review of Books.

Thursday Mar 09, 2017
Episode 26: Discussing David Foster Wallace with Jeff Severs
Thursday Mar 09, 2017
Thursday Mar 09, 2017
In this episode, we talk with Jeff Severs, author of the excellent new book David Foster Wallace’s Balancing Books: Fictions of Value, published by Columbia University Press. Severs is associate professor of English at the University of British Columbia, Canada, Convexity.
Severs is also a noted Pynchon scholar, author of a number of scholarly articles and co-editor of a book about Against the Day.
His website can be found at https://jeffreysevers.wordpress.com/
Show Notes
1:00 - Introductions
2:40 - Austinites
3:34 - James Manguson
5:00 - MFA programs
6:10 - Mary Carter - the name Matt was trying to think of
7:50 - Overview of the book
9:05 - Balance in general
10:05 - Axiology - study of valuation
13:06 - Heidegger defines axios
17:18 - A Tripartite writer
26:26 - A biographical approach
34:15 - Juxtaposing hard labor with a dissolute consumerist society
40:31 - GQ, Obama, rhetoric, 2008
46:53 - The civic vision of the Pale King
1:35:40 - Jeff correctly picks Moonlight as the Best Picture winner!

Sunday Nov 27, 2016
Episode 21 - Discussing David Foster Wallace with Clare Hayes-Brady
Sunday Nov 27, 2016
Sunday Nov 27, 2016
In this episode we talk with Wallace scholar Clare Hayes-Brady about her new book The Unspeakable Failures of David Foster Wallace.
http://www.bloomsbury.com/us/the-unspeakable-failures-of-david-foster-wallace-9781501313530/
She is Lecturer in American Literature at University College, Dublin.
We discuss a variety of issues in this episode including bad endings, DFW Studies, Ricoeur, love, Their Eyes Were Watching God, and assorted other things.
You can find her on Twitter https://twitter.com/ClareHayesBrady
Show notes
00:30 - Byzantine Erotica right off the bat
01:30 - Spelling of Quebecois
02:30 - UCD vs TCD
04:01 - The Unspeakable Failures
05:01 - Noncompletion, the lack of closure
05:45 - A Failed Entertainment
08:30 - Short Story Theory, resistance to closure
10:39 - We don’t have neat narratives
13:00 - How can you be done with something?
14:26 - Starting IJ again
15:20 - The peripheral stuff
16:27 - Was IJ/DFW narcissistic?
19:10 - The empathetic connection with readers
20:38 - Incoherent need to communicate
22:21 - The problem with romantic relationships--and Anne Geddes
25:21 - Misogyny from a place of fear
26:36 - The Granola Cruncher
30:53 - The silencing of female characters
31:02 - The Lionel Shriver issue
35:18 - A poorly disguised avatar
35:45 - Hungerford piece
37:02 - The Joycean Boys Club
39:59 - The C-word
44:42 - Inhabiting other minds
45:29 - Hurston not explaining things
47:26 - White male protagonists. . . groan
48:46 - VIDA count and the equivalent awareness
50:01 - Separating the artist from the art
51:29 - Ferrante & Knausgaard
55:36 - Writing beyond his own perspective
56:20 - Hardcore Theory Weenies
58:41 - Conflating a couple of paradoxes
59:59 - A fascinating disaster of a book
1:01:54 - The conclusions of the failures
1:04:40 - First attempt in Learning
1:05:08 - Post on Poor Yorick’s Summer
1:05:30 - Honest Ulsterman and motherhood
1:08:40 - Easter Egg

Friday Oct 28, 2016
Episode 20: Discussing David Foster Wallace with John Mango
Friday Oct 28, 2016
Friday Oct 28, 2016
In this episode we talk with John Mango. John is a teacher and a scholar but in this episode we talk a lot about recovery, AA membership, depression, and alcoholism--perennial DFW subjects all around.
01:07 - Twenty episodes in a year
02:02 - Introducing John Mango
04:01 - John Grisham paperbacks
05:05 - Joseph Heller, Thomas Pynchon, Cormac McCarthy
06:30 - A comforting loss and depression
08:30 - Terry Eagleton & the role of literature
11:22 - Discovering Wallace after death
13:15 - We feel like we know him
14:14 - Can you even talk about AA?
15:25 - Hiding stuff all the time
16:29 - Humility
17:30 - Separating the biography from the writing?
18:20 - Alcohol & Poetry, John Berryman
19:48 - Sharing and honesty and irony
21:11 - The Big Book is IJ
22:14 - William James, Religious Experience
25:39 - AA and agnosticism
26:02 - G.O.D. = Group of Drunks
26:25 - It all comes down to pragmatism
27:15 - Gately saving Randy Lenz, a program of action
29:04 - The gift of desperation
31:30 - St. Anselm
33:00 - Gately enjoys riding with the crocodiles
37:31 - Big Craig
38:10 - Interview with Deb Larson-Venable, the real Pat Montesian
39:43 - How John came in
41:09 - Gratitude? Seriously?
44:58 - A giant love letter to AA
48:44 - It sounds like a cliche
51:20 - A favorite part of Infinite Jest
54:05 - Fleeting mention of Trump, sorry
54:44 - Fake cliche motto
57:40 - Burlington, Vermont & Hebron, Connecticut
59:01 - Norwalk virus
1:00:11 - The Joke in Infinite Jest
1:02:13 - Vocabulary of emotional literacy
1:03:56 - The problem of solipsism
1:07:07 - @callmejohnmango, Facebook, The Blog - https://hazardsofthecourse.wordpress.com/
1:10:23 - Destigmatizing the disease
1:11:13 - Android Netrunner

Thursday Sep 15, 2016
Episode 18 - Discussing Infinite Jest with Sean Pratt
Thursday Sep 15, 2016
Thursday Sep 15, 2016
In this episode we speak with audiobook narrator extraordinaire, Sean Pratt. Sean is the narrator of the 56-hour-long audiobook of Infinite Jest. He has also narrated over 800 other books. Believe it or not, Infinite Jest is not even the longest book Sean has narrated! We discuss the mechanics of recording, the different voices in the book, the endnotes issue, what it takes to become an audiobook narrator, and many other things
You can find Sean on Twitter at @SPPresents and his website http://www.SeanPrattPresents.com
Show Notes
2:06 - Sean Pratt’s background & how he got the part
7:04 - So you want to be an audiobook narrator
10:01 - The economics of recording an audiobook
13:30 - A state of “flow”
16:24 - How many hours did this really take?
20:51 - When we first meet Ken Erdedy
24:30 - Acting vs. Reading: Tom Robbins
28:04 - A silk purse out of a sow’s ear
32:01 - Reading the paratext & The Four Voices of Nonfiction
35:10 - Just skip the endnotes: a debate
41:50 - No really, how to do the endnotes?
44:02 - Blood Sister: One Tough Nun & comedy
47:50 - Do you listen to yourself?
50:38 - Always Be Entertaining
52:52 - How to navigate all the voices
58:10 - Don’t do it like a puppet show
59:15 - Hal watching a video cartridge
1:01:15 - Some of Sean’s best audiobooks
1:06:25 - Speed vs. Tempo
1:12:20 - To honor the text
1:16:15 - Easter egg

Monday Aug 15, 2016
Episode 17.1 - David Foster Wallace Conference 2016 Recap Show - Part 1
Monday Aug 15, 2016
Monday Aug 15, 2016
In Part 1 of this two-part episode we look back at the 3rd Annual David Foster Wallace Conference, held at Illinois State University. We talk with a number of DFW scholars and conference attendees.

Wednesday Jul 27, 2016
Episode 16 - Discussing David Foster Wallace with Edmund Waldstein
Wednesday Jul 27, 2016
Wednesday Jul 27, 2016
In this episode, we talk with Pater Edmund Waldstein.

Wednesday Jun 29, 2016
Episode 15 - Discussing David Foster Wallace with Krzys Piekarski
Wednesday Jun 29, 2016
Wednesday Jun 29, 2016
In this episode, we talk with Krzys Piekarski, PhD. Krzys is a DFW scholar who has written extensively on DFW and Buddhism. He also runs a wisdom program in Austin called Character by Design: https://characterbydesign.org/
We cover a variety of topics in this show, from parables to stress and boredom to the basics of Buddhism and how it manifests in Wallace’s writing.
The book Krzys mentions is at the end of the show is called Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind, and we talk about the books of Steven Batchelor - Buddhism without Beliefs.
His podcast, with author Sunni Brown is called Sunni & Wise. http://sunniandwise.com / @sunniandwise
There are some weird booming sounds in this episode. Sorry about that!
Show Notes
01:46 - Introduction Krzys & his teaching background
03:00 - Teaching in prison
04:24 - Krzys’s dissertation on Buddhism, Philosophy, and David Foster Wallace
06:48 - Can Wallace be considered a Buddhist thinker?
08:30 - Krzys’s path to Buddhism
11:00 - DFW’s undergrad years at Amherst & Wittgenstein
12:08 - Wittgensteinian zen parable
14:14 - The limits of language
14:25 - Buddhism 101
15:15 - Suffering
18:59 - How we can gain freedom
21:50 - George Saunders calls Wallace a great Buddhist writer
23:57 - Wallace and meditation
25:38 - The boredom thing
29:11 - Flow state
35:49 - What is the purpose of life?
36:00 - David Foster Wallace and the Velveteen Rabbit
38:30 - Escape from the self
43:10 - Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind
44:20 - Mario Incandenza
47:00 - Disgust and addicts
52:00 - Trying to express inexpressible truths
53:20 - Double binds
57:20 - Stepping in to a monastery
1:00:30 - Sincere curiosity
1:02:15 - There is nothing missing in you
1:07:00 - Show wrap-up, thanks, and links

Wednesday May 25, 2016
Wednesday May 25, 2016
In this special episode we talk with Professor Josh Roiland and his class at the University of Maine. Roiland is Assistant Professor + CLAS-Honors Preceptor of Journalism in the Department of Communication and Journalism + Honors College. Roiland’s class this semester was called “Consider David Foster Wallace” and they read a TON of DFW work. As part of their class project, the students also created a really useful website about IJ called Consider Infinite Jest https://considerinfinitejest.wordpress.com/
Josh has written a lot about Wallace and here are a few of his pieces we mention in this episode:
· "Getting Away from It All: The Literary Journalism of David Foster Wallace and Nietzsche's Concept of 'Oblivion'"Literary Journalism Studies, Vol. 1, No. 2, Fall 2009, 89-105. (Revised and reprinted in The Legacy of David Foster Wallace, University of Iowa Press).
· "The Fine Print: Uncovering the True Story of David Foster Wallace and the 'Reality Boundary'" Literary Journalism Studies, Vol. 5, No. 2, Fall 2013, 148-161. (Reprinted by Longreads; 10 Most Popular Exclusives of 2014).
· "Spiritually Midwestern: What Middle America Meant to David Foster Wallace" published (w/essential footnotes maddeningly located on the side of the text) by A24 Film Studios "Just Words" site in conjunction w/the release of The End of The Tour.
You can follow Josh Roiland on Twitter @JoshRoiland or check out his website: www.joshroiland.com
SPECIAL THANKS are due to Justin Harlan-Haughey for his audio expertise.Thanks also to Robyn O’Neil, Parquet Courts, Josh Roiland, Derrek Schrader, Alex Abrahams, Emily McNair, Atticus Dennis, and Taylor Cunningham.
SHOW NOTES
03:00 – Josh’s writing on Wallace
04:38 – Josh’s email intro to the class
06:34 – Class syllabus and reading list
08:38 – Reconciling Wallace’s death with his writing
10:21 – Starting the class with a discussion onsuicide
13:52 – Is Wallace’s writing autobiographical?
16:55 – The class on Twitter
18:20 – The Wallace community on Twitter
19:51 – When the class read Infinite Jest
21:35 – Meeting in different spaces
22:45 – The ending of Infinite Jest
24:35 – Is the graveyard scene real? What’s going onthere?
27:49 – Waiting for plotlines to converge
30:30 – Reading IJ in public
31:07 – The cliché of dudes/bros reading Infinite Jest
37:38 – The marginalization of journalism in Englishdepartments
39:06 – DFW’s exaggerations in non-fiction
40:25 – Your favorite Wallace piece?
48:24 – Your least favorite Wallace piece?
53:33 – How to teach Infinite Jest
55:25 – Class-created website about IJ
1:01:32 – What to read after Wallace?
1:05:15 – Your favorite Wallace character?
1:09:52 – Any huge takeaways from this experience?
Contact us at concavityshow@gmail.comor @concavityshow

Wednesday Apr 27, 2016
Episode 13: Discussing David Foster Wallace with Rob Short
Wednesday Apr 27, 2016
Wednesday Apr 27, 2016
In this episode we talk with Wallace scholar Rob Short. We discuss everything from AA & recovery to William James and summer camp.
You can follow Rob on twitter and academia.edu here:
https://twitter.com/vismeainlabore
http://florida.academia.edu/RobShort
Show Notes
Urine trouble? You’re in luck! - 00:49
Rob’s academic background – 1:09
Wallace’s interview with SPEAK magazine – 3:15
Rob’s paper at the 2014 DFW Conference – 5:26
The idea of “worshipping” – 6:30
Readers at academic conferences – 8:42
The obtuseness of Derrida – 10:24
Glenn K. – 11:30
“To impress people when you are 24” – 12:19
Teaching Wallace - 15:18
DFW’s early publishing history & audience – 29:00
David Markson – 30:26
Wallace’s inter-novel period – 34:00
Rob’s dissertation’s structure – 37:27
William James – 41:26
The rhetoric of AA – 46:33
How Don Gately goes straight – 50:30
Zadie Smith on DFW – 52:29
Catholics by Brian Moore – 56:33
Personal religion stuff – 57:45
United Church of Canada and atheism– 1:01:21
Post-secular society – 1:03:36
A spectrum of salvation/hope - 1:05:47
Addicts are throwaway people – 1:08:15
“Use” and usefulness - 1:09:55
Rote discipline and routine – 1:12:35
Wallace at Le Conversazioni http://robshort.org/files/Le_Conversazioni_2006.mp4 - 1:15:48
Eternal thanks to Parquet Courts, David C. Jensen, and Robyn O’Neil … and You of course.

Friday Apr 08, 2016
Episode 12: Discussing David Foster Wallace with David Hering
Friday Apr 08, 2016
Friday Apr 08, 2016
In this episode we talk with DFW scholar David Hering. Hering is the author of the forthcoming book David Foster Wallace: Fiction + Form. He's also a Lecturer at the University of Liverpool and editor of the book Consider David Foster Wallace. You can follow him on Twitter at @hering_david


Thursday Mar 24, 2016
Episode 11: Answering Your Questions about David Foster Wallace
Thursday Mar 24, 2016
Thursday Mar 24, 2016
THE Q&A EPISODE


Friday Feb 26, 2016
Friday Feb 26, 2016
In this episode, we talk with Nick Maniatis, proprietor and webmaster of the invaluable website, The Howling Fantods.

Friday Feb 12, 2016
Episode 9: Discussing David Foster Wallace with Jenni B. Baker
Friday Feb 12, 2016
Friday Feb 12, 2016
In this episode, we talk about Infinite Jest (and lots of other things) with Jenni B. Baker, Editor-in-Chief of The Found Poetry Review and creator of the Erasing Infinite project.

Friday Jan 29, 2016
Episode 8 - Discussing David Foster Wallace with DT Max
Friday Jan 29, 2016
Friday Jan 29, 2016
In this episode we talk with Wallace biographer D.T. Max. Max is the author of Every Love Story is a Ghost Story.

Friday Jan 15, 2016
Episode 7 - Discussing David Foster Wallace with Chris Ayers
Friday Jan 15, 2016
Friday Jan 15, 2016
Chris Ayers designed a number of movie posters from James Incandenza's filmography. He posts his art and designs at http://pooryorickentertainment.tumblr.com

Thursday Jan 07, 2016
Episode 6 - 2015 Year in Review
Thursday Jan 07, 2016
Thursday Jan 07, 2016
In this episode we go almost completely OFF TOPIC and wrap up 2015 by discussing our favorite books, movies, music, TV shows, and games of the year.

Wednesday Dec 30, 2015
Episode 5 - Discussing David Foster Wallace with Tim Groenland
Wednesday Dec 30, 2015
Wednesday Dec 30, 2015
In this episode with talk with Irish scholar Tim Groenland, who has written extensively about Wallace and The Pale King. Groenland's doctoral work is concerned with authorship and the way Michael Pietsch molded The Pale King after Wallace's death. We also discuss Gordon Lish's editorial relationship with Raymond Carver.

Tuesday Oct 27, 2015
Episode 2 - Discussing David Foster Wallace and The End of the Tour
Tuesday Oct 27, 2015
Tuesday Oct 27, 2015
In this episode, we spend most of the show discussing James Ponsoldt's film "The End of the Tour." If you have not seen the movie yet, there are spoilers of a sort.
Show Notes
(00:00) - Intro
(00:30) - End of the Tour (http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/the_end_of_the_tour_2015/)
(02:39) - James Ponsoldt
(04:20) - Jason Segel’s Performance
(07:42) - Faithfulness to The Book
(08:00) - David Lipsky
(09:54) - Jesse Eisenberg’s Performance
(10:53) - Lipsky and Wallace’s Relationship
(13:33) - The Facade of Fame vs. Authenticity
(15:00) - Success, Fulfillment, and Happiness
(17:25) - Today’s Relevance
(19:30) - Self-Promotion in Writing
(22:00) - Should It Exist (http://biblioklept.org/2013/12/13/although-of-course-you-end-up-riffing-obliquely-on-how-a-david-foster-wallace-road-trip-movie-is-a-terrible-idea/)
(23:47) - The Denunciation from Wallace’s Estate
(24:52) - “Saint” Dave
(28:39) - Wallace’s Portrayal Too Happy/Sad?
(36:45) - DFW’s Cultural Relevance
(37:26) - Other Adaptations
(41:30) - The Novel’s Cultural Relevance
(43:19) - 20th Anniversary of Infinite Jest
(46:49) - Wallace and Feminism
(48:08) - Final Thoughts on The Movie
(51:37) - The Director James Ponsoldt
(54:44) - Outro
People Mentioned
David Foster Wallace (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Foster_Wallace)
David Lipsky (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Lipsky)
James Ponsoldt (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Ponsoldt)
Jason Segel (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jason_Segel)
Jesse Eisenberg (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesse_Eisenberg)
Don DeLillo (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don_DeLillo)
Cormac McCarthy (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cormac_McCarthy)
Thomas Pynchon (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Pynchon)
Edwin Turner (Biblioklept) (https://twitter.com/biblioklept)
Brian Eno (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian_Eno)
Bonnie Nadell
D.T. Max (http://dtmax.com)
Michael Schur (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Schur)
John Krasinski (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Krasinski)
Chris Ayers (Poor Yorick Ent.) (http://pooryorickentertainment.tumblr.com)
Mary K. Holland (https://faculty.newpaltz.edu/maryholland/index.php/cv/)
Robyn O’Neil (robynoneil.com)
Parquet Courts (https://parquetcourts.wordpress.com)

Friday Oct 09, 2015
Episode 1 - Discussing David Foster Wallace
Friday Oct 09, 2015
Friday Oct 09, 2015
Show Notes
(00:00) - Intro
(01:08) - Matt’s Background
(01:10) - wallace-l
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Pynchon)
(01:55) - Howling Fantods (http://www.thehowlingfantods.com/dfw/)
(02:50) - Thomas Pynchon (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Pynchon)
(05:04) - Sideshow Media Group (http://sideshowmediagroup.com)
(05:12) - Elegant Complexity (http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1655890.Elegant_Complexity)
(05:12) - Nature’s Nightmare (http://www.amazon.com/Natures-Nightmare-Analyzing-Wallaces-Oblivion/dp/098893051X/)
(13:02) - Academic Papers
(14:21) - Dave’s Background
(14:55) - The Ogopogo (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ogopogo)
(15:10) - Infinite Jest/Molly Notkin/Joelle van Dyne
(17.30) - Roberto Bolano (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roberto_Bolaño)
(18:51) - Don DeLillo (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don_DeLillo)
(20:00) - Chris Adrian/McSweeney’s
(http://www.mcsweeneys.net)
(21:45) - Cormac McCarthy (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cormac_McCarthy)
(24:00) - The Pale King/ Chris Fogel
(26:48) - Jonathan Lethem (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan_Lethem)
(29:34) - First Annual DFW conference
(36:48) - Special Thanks
People Mentioned
David Foster Wallace (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Foster_Wallace)
Nick Maniatis (https://twitter.com/nick_maniatis)
Thomas Pynchon (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Pynchon)
John Bucher (http://johnbucher.org/)
Greg Carlisle (http://www.amazon.com/Natures-Nightmare-Analyzing-Wallaces-Oblivion/dp/098893051X/)
David Hering (http://www.amazon.com/Consider-David-Foster-Wallace-Critical/dp/0976146576/)
Cormac Mcarthy (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cormac_McCarthy)
Don DeLillo (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Don_DeLillo)
Roberto Bolano (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roberto_Bolaño)
Jonathan Franzen (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan_Franzen)
George Saunders (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Saunders)
Jeffrey Eugenides
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeffrey_Eugenides)
William T. Vollmann (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_T._Vollmann)
Rick Moody (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rick_Moody)
Chris Adrian (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chris_Adrian)
Adam Levin (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adam_Levin)
Beth Nugent (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beth_Nugent)
Larry McCaffery (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Larry_McCaffery)
Jonathan Lethem (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan_Lethem)
William Faulkner (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Faulkner)
John Updike (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Updike)