Brief Interviews With Hideous Men

David Foster Wallace

Language: English

Publisher: Back Bay

Published: Jan 1, 1999

Pages: 321

Description:

David Foster Wallace made an art of taking readers into places no other writer even gets near. The series of stories from which this exuberantly acclaimed book takes its title is a sequence of imagined interviews with men on the subject of their relations with women. These portraits of men at their most self-justifying, loquacious, and benighted explore poignantly and hilariously the agonies of sexual connections.

List of stories

"A Radically Condensed History of Postindustrial Life"
"Death Is Not the End"
"Forever Overhead"
"Brief Interviews with Hideous Men"
"Yet Another Example of the Porousness of Certain Borders (XI)"
"The Depressed Person"
"The Devil Is a Busy Man"
"Think"
"Signifying Nothing"
"Brief Interviews with Hideous Men"
"Datum Centurio"
"Octet"
"Adult World (I)"
"Adult World (II)"
"The Devil Is a Busy Man"
"Church Not Made with Hands"
"Yet Another Example of the Porousness of Certain Borders (VI)"
"Brief Interviews with Hideous Men"
"Tri-Stan: I Sold Sissee Nar to Ecko"
"On His Deathbed, Holding Your Hand, the Acclaimed New Young Off-Broadway Playwright's Father Begs a Boon"
"Suicide as a Sort of Present"
"Brief Interviews with Hideous Men"
"Yet Another Example of the Porousness of Certain Borders (XXIV)"

David Foster Wallace has made an art of taking readers into places no other writer ever gets near. In the pages of his novels INFINITE JEST and THE BROOM OF THE SYSTEM and the collections GIRL WITH CURIOUS HAIR and A SUPPOSEDLY FUN THING I'LL NEVER DO AGAIN, he had created as unique a voice and vies as any writer at work today, rendering a dazzling array of interior states with delicious insight and humor. In this new collection, the author extends his range and craft in twenty-two stories that intertwine hilarity with an escalating disquiet to create almos unbearable tensions. Three stories venture inside minds and landscapes that are at once recognizable and utterly strange: a boy paralyzed by fear atop a high diving board ("Forever Overhead"), a poet lounging contented beside his pool ("Death Is Not the End"), a young couple experiencing sexual uncertainties ("Adult World"), a depressed woman soliciting comfort from her threadbare support network ("The Depressed Person", chosen for Prize Stories 1999: The O. Henry Awards). The series of stories from which the book takes its title is a tour de force sequence of imagined interviews with men on the subject of their relations with women. These portraits of men at thier most self-justifying, loquacious, and benighted explore poignantly and hilariously the agonies of sexual connection. BRIEF INTERVIEWS WITH HIDEOUS MEN gives us men and women, celebrity and bitter loneliness, sexual posturing and naked honesty, erudition and apeman babble - a world whose emotional complexity and outright comedy closely resemble our own. In these remarkable stories, David Foster Wallace reaffirms his reputation a a "passionate and deeply serious wrtier" (San Francisco Chronicle) who again expands our ideas of the pleasures of fiction can afford.