Friday, January 24, 2014

Essay

Make my brief discourse

30 Free Essays & Stories by David Foster Wallace put ~ the Web
in e-books, Literature | February 22nd, 2012

We started the week expecting to make public one David Foster Wallace post. Then, for of the 50th birthday celebration, it turned into brace. And now three. We spent more time tracking down free DFW stories and essays advantageous on the web, and they’re wholly now listed in our collection of Free eBooks. But we didn’t be deficient them to escape your attention. So in this place they are — 23 pieces published through David Foster Wallace between 1989 and 2011, mainly in major U.S. publications like The New Yorker, Harper’s, The Atlantic, and The Paris Review. Enjoy, and dress in’t miss our other collections of unconstrained writings by Philip K. Dick and Neil Gaiman.

“9/11: The View From the Midwest” (Rolling Stone, October 25, 2001)
“All That” (New Yorker, December 14, 2009)
“An Interval” (New Yorker, January 30, 1995)
“Asset” (New Yorker, January 30, 1995)
“Backbone” An Excerpt from The Pale King (New Yorker, March 7, 2011)
“Big Red Son” from Consider the Lobster & Other Essays
“Brief Interviews by Hideous Men” (The Paris Review, Fall 1997)
“Consider the Lobster” (Gourmet, August 2004)
“David Lynch Keeps His Head” (Premiere, 1996)
“Everything is Green” (Harpers, September 1989)
“E Unibus Pluram: Television and U.S. Fiction” (The Review of Contemporary Fiction, June 22, 1993)
“Federer because Religious Experience” (New York Times, August 20, 2006)
“Good People” (New Yorker, February 5, 2007)
“Host” (The Atlantic, April 2005)
“Incarnations of Burned Children” (Esquire, April 21, 2009)
“Laughing with Kafka” (Harper’s, January 1998)
“Little Expressionless Animals” (The Paris Review, Spring 1988)
“On Life and Work” (Kenyon College Commencement suit, 2005)
“Rabbit Resurrected” (Harper’s, August 1992)
“Several Birds” (New Yorker, June 17, 1994)
“Shipping Out: On the (almost lethal) comforts of a luxury rove over the sea” (Harper’s, January 1996)
“Tennis, trigonometry, tornadoes A...

Essay after this

No comments:

Post a Comment