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David Foster Wallace: In His Own Words
- Narrated by: David Foster Wallace
- Length: 8 hrs and 52 mins
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5.0 stars..... quite an experience
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In the stories that make up Oblivion, David Foster Wallace joins the rawest, most naked humanity with the infinite involutions of self-consciousness--a combination that is dazzlingly, uniquely his. These are worlds undreamt-of by any other mind. Only David Foster Wallace could convey a father's desperate loneliness by way of his son's daydreaming through a teacher's homicidal breakdown ("The Soul Is Not a Smithy"). Or could explore the deepest and most hilarious aspects of creativity.
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Equations via audio are tuff
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Publisher's Summary
"[DFW's] delivery is dead-on and fresh, the words often springing from his mouth as if conceived on the spot.... an audible confirmation that modern American writing continues to gain strength." (Publishers Weekly on Consider the Lobster)
Collected here for the first time are the stories and speeches of David Foster Wallace as read by the author himself. Over the course of his career, David Foster Wallace recorded a variety of his work in diverse circumstances - from studio recordings to live performances - that are finally compiled in this unique collection. Some of the pieces collected here are: "Another Pioneer", recorded at The University of Arizona Poetry Center; stories from Brief Interviews with Hideous Men and Consider the Lobster, recorded in the studio; and the unforgettable "This Is Water", his 2005 commencement address given at Kenyon College. Also included are two interviews and a 2005 conversation with Rick Moody at Herbst Theater in San Francisco. This collection has a special introduction written and read by acclaimed writer and editor John Jeremiah Sullivan.
For fans of David Foster Wallace who have read everything he ever wrote as well as those looking to familiarize themselves with his work, David Foster Wallace: In His Own Words is a special, unique collection unavailable anywhere else.
What listeners say about David Foster Wallace: In His Own Words
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Karen Chance
- 04-07-16
The best book on Audible!
I'm a woman from the baby boomer generation and I can't remember being as inspired by any writer ever more than I am by David Foster Wallace. He has given us the gift of a very real magic mirror in which to see ourselves and our culture. He dares us to look into it and not look away again until we are changed. I thank this most skillful and artful of humans who sacrificed himself to leave us with these experiences, begging for us to live with a broader bandwidth of understanding.
19 people found this helpful
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- Nik L
- 11-25-15
Absolute must for any DFW fan
I never leave reviews on anything. This was worth it. Here are five extra words.
16 people found this helpful
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- Jacob Ford
- 04-16-17
Undisregardably good
I assume the professionally talented audiobook narrators, when they are alone together sipping hot toddies in their private high-fidelity dens, critique DFW’s slow and hummy reading voice. But I think it is right. I do not demand a book be vocally performed any more than I demand each character’s quotations be printed in a bespoke color.
DFW is reading aloud, at times guiding or inserting a paratextual sentence, and it feels good.
N.b., which stands for nota bene but really just means by the way: this audiobook contains all the content of the Consider the Lobster (or at least the DFW-voiced extent of it), so budget your credits accordingly.
12 people found this helpful
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- Matt MacLaughlin
- 01-13-17
Not DFW's Fault
I enjoyed this production very much, I loved hearing DFW inflect his own work. It made his words much more real for me. What I didn't enjoy, was the introduction. The vocals were drab and Halloween-esque which I don't think favorably "sets up" the literary delights the rest of the presentation has to offer. In short, skip the intro and get right into the good stuff. Overall a great listen and worthy of your time.
5 people found this helpful
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- AmazonCustomer
- 08-10-16
The place to start with DFW
Ten years ago I started Infinite Jest. I made it to page 89. I stopped not because it was too difficult or not interesting, but because I simply wasn't in the mood for such a commitment at the time. I've read longer books and enjoyed them, so it wasn't the length either.
Fast forward to the present and my new audible obsession. I considered IJ but opted for this collection instead, primarily because I wanted to sample his works and, more importantly, hear his read how own stuff.
I'm now among those who consider DFW among the best writers of my generation. I would recommend this selection as the place to start if you are new to his writings.
Of the pieces offered here, my favorite is his review of tennis star Tracy Austin's ghost written memoir. The concluding commencement speech (available elsewhere for free, as both audio and video) is also excellent.
Highly recommended.
6 people found this helpful
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- Daniel Carlson
- 10-01-19
So healing to hear his voice again
To have these selections all in one place—essays, fiction, interviews, the Kenyon speech—is so wonderful. It’s heartbreaking and fantastic all at once to hear him reading these things and sharing his views. Can’t recommend this enough, whether you’re new or a long-time fan.
1 person found this helpful
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- Linda Sisco
- 04-18-17
Astounding
There is a path, a path we may hope to follow where with each step we leave more of ourself behind and where, with no notice, no signage, we discover we are no longer on the path we were so sure would take us where we wanted to go. And so with no destination known and no destination home we shed our sureness and look up in wonder.
1 person found this helpful
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- David
- 07-15-16
Like Being with DFW Himself!
Would you recommend this audiobook to a friend? If so, why?
If you are a DFW fan, then, yes, absolutely. It is SUCH a pleasure to hear his work in his own voice. A real treat. Gives him a living presence with you despite his untimely departure.
Was this a book you wanted to listen to all in one sitting?
No. In my opinion, the stories are too numerous and varied to want to listen to in one sitting. I especially enjoyed listening to this in my car in bits and pieces.
Any additional comments?
There are two downsides I can see from this audio book. First, there were so many times that I wanted to have a table of contents to refer to. There are so many stories here along with longer essays and some interviews that you can get a little lost trying to know what you're listening to and where you are in the book. But there is no easy way to find this online and it got a bit frustrating at times because the book is a collection of various pieces of his writing (a whole lot from Brief Interviews with Hideous Men). Second, the interviews were much harder to hear, the microphones were lousy and distant unlike the majority of the book which sounds like he read it in a studio, loud and crisp. Nevertheless, I loved loved loved hearing his own voice.
1 person found this helpful
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- Mark
- 08-07-15
Footnotes
It was great to have the footnotes included and shows how well it works for us
5 people found this helpful
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- lllllllllllllllll
- 02-16-17
NO TRACKLIST
What would have made David Foster Wallace: In His Own Words better?
8 HOURS ALMOST 9 AND NOT A SINGLE CHAPTER TITLE, IMPOSIBLE TO FIND
Would you ever listen to anything by David Foster Wallace again?
I GUESS I'D HAVE TO LISTEN IT AGAIN AND AGAIN UNTIL FINDING ANYTHING
Would you be willing to try another one of David Foster Wallace’s performances?
SURE
7 people found this helpful
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- Michaela Taylor
- 04-19-16
Essential DFW
This collection simply evinces Wallace's power to radically change a worldview with his writing; less a port- or starboard "turn" in worldview, but rather a plunging to new depths. And what glorious things await down there. This is essential for any DFW fan.
3 people found this helpful
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- R. Bell
- 12-16-20
A bit scrappy
This is a grab bag of various DFW interviews and readings. They vary a lot in quality (material not audio). Some of it makes for enjoyable listening and some of it (un?)intentionally uncomfortable such as his story about a woman defeating her rapist by pretending to enjoy the attack. Oh, and as others have said, chapter titles would be very useful for context here.
2 people found this helpful
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- Anonymous User
- 06-21-20
Brilliant
A wonderful collection read by the great DFW himself. Some incredibly moving pieces and overall, for me, a very important audio experience. Would highly recommend.
2 people found this helpful
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- Paulo Abelha Ferreira
- 06-03-17
Great writer, important voice
This is water and David Foster Wallace dissolved back into us. Great writer, important voice.
2 people found this helpful
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- Phoebe Millwood
- 07-21-20
Great listening
Read by himself it was captivating and enthralling. Enjoyed it so much it began a pattern of me eating takeout in my car while listening to him, instead of driving straight home, eating at the beach, or eating in the restaurant. Good companion. Challenging and confronting topics though. He really likes to focus his attention on the uncomfortable outliers. The weird, deranged acts people do that most would shake their head in bisbelief he instead leaps in with a psycho analytical lens.
1 person found this helpful