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David Foster Wallace Dies at Age 46

9/14/08, 1:15 pm EST

Photo: Janette Beckman/Retna

Infinite Jest author and Rolling Stone contributor David Foster Wallace was found dead in his Claremont, California home Friday night. His wife called police at 9:30 p.m. to report she had discovered Wallace hanged himself. He was 46.

In 2000, Wallace covered John McCain on the campaign trail for Rolling Stone in a piece called “The Weasel, Twelve Monkeys and the Shrub: Seven Days in the Life of the Late, Great John McCain.” He also contributed “The View From Mrs. Thompson’s” in October 2001, which describes his personal 9/11 experience in Illinois; that piece is included in the 2005 collection Consider the Lobster and Other Essays. Earlier this summer, Wallace published an expanded version of his McCain piece as McCain’s Promise.

Wallace, who was born on February 21, 1962, spent a large part of his childhood in Illinois, where both of his parents worked as professors. After studying English and philosophy at Amherst, Wallace published his first novel, The Broom of the System, in 1987. His footnote-packed 1,079 opus Infinite Jest came out nearly a decade later, but he published short stories and essays in the interim, including 1989’s Girl With the Curious Hair and Signifying Rappers: Rap and Race in the Urban Present, a meditation on hip-hop he wrote with Mark Costello. In 1997, he received a MacArthur “Genius Grant” and published the non-fiction collection A Supposedly Fun Thing I’ll Never Do Again.

Wallace had taught creative writing at Pomona College for the past six years; he was on leave this semester.

The Weasel, Twelve Monkeys and the Shrub: Seven Days in the Life of the Late, Great John McCain

The View From Mrs. Thompson’s: David Foster Wallace Reflects on 9/11


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Comments

TinFoilHat | 9/14/2008, 2:46 pm EST

as an ex-RS subscriber, I remember these stories. As I recall they were quite good. Its hard to hear about this type of thing anytime. In this case we all suffer a unquantifiable loss. My sympathies go out to the RS staff who have lost a colleague.

gammaRays | 9/15/2008, 3:17 am EST

let’s hope any unfinished muck-rakings make it to see the light of day and that this didn’t happen under ‘mysterious circumstances’. just saying.

MP | 9/15/2008, 7:30 am EST

Would you please republish “The View from Mrs. Thompson’s” for us? I remember it being one of the best post- Sept 11th essays I have ever read.

Phil | 9/15/2008, 3:54 pm EST

While this wasn’t published in RS, my favorite piece of his writing was an article about Roger Federer for the Times. Really heartbreaking that such a great voice has been silenced…

telling | 9/17/2008, 7:56 pm EST

The obsession with the meaningless, trivial and absurd is not healthy. There is a hidden meaning to the world, the meaning you create yourself. There seems to be a kind of celebration of ignorance in this kind of writing, as if style is everything

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