
Both Flesh and Not
Essays
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Narrado por:
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Robert Petkoff
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Katherine Kellgren
Beloved for his epic agony, brilliantly discerning eye, and hilarious and constantly self-questioning tone, David Foster Wallace was heralded by both critics and fans as the voice of a generation. Both Flesh and Not gathers 15 essays never published in book form, including "Federer Both Flesh and Not", considered by many to be his nonfiction masterpiece; "The (As it Were) Seminal Importance of Terminator 2", which deftly dissects James Cameron's blockbuster; and "Fictional Futures and the Conspicuously Young", an examination of television's effect on a new generation of writers.
A sweeping, exhilarating collection of the author's most emotionally immediate work, Both Flesh and Not spans almost 20 years of Wallace's career and reminds us why A.O. Scott called him "The Best Mind of His Generation" (The New York Times).
©2012 David Foster Wallace (P)2012 Hachette AudioListeners also enjoyed...




















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Would you listen to Both Flesh and Not again? Why?
They pad out this book with some pedestrian definitions from DFW's notebook at the beginning of each essay. With the lame table of contents you cant find where each essay is and you have to listen to interminable reading of definitions to get to the next essayhate this format
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In the middle of the essays (any time) Katherine Kellgren interupts Robert Petkoff and reads the footnotes. She was NOT English. She was putting on a phony English Accent thinking he made her sound high class. She reads with a smug self congratulating tone as if she is very pleased with herself. I could tell right away there was something wrong with her voice. Nothing I have ever heard from Black Stone Audio ever sounded this bad. She has the worst reading voice I have ever heard on any audio book! Sadly I will exchange this Audio Book and buy the Kindle Edition. Robert Petkoff sounds fantastic as David Foster Wallace. I demand to find out who was behind this decision to not only use Katherine Kellgren but fix it so her voice can not skipped over. The only way to make this audio book work would be buy the CDs and use audio editing software to edit out Katherine Kellgren’s voice, and that is too much work as these are not the best of David Foster Wallace’s Essays. These are second string essays published after he died.
Fake English Accent ruined the whole book
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The titular piece on Federer is a great one and has been referred to by many as a masterpiece. Tennis has always been a major writing point of Wallace's with the subject featuring prominently in Infinite Jest as well as pieces focusing on the sport in "Derivative Sport in Tornado Alley" in the Supposedly Fun Thing... collection and a review of Tracy Austin's autobiography in Consider the Lobster. As a gifted writer, powerful observer and tennis aficionado (he tinkered around in the junior rankings as a teenager), Wallace make's the sport of tennis, oft not considered a major one in here in the U.S., come to life; adding beauty and grace in a manner that transfers his enthusiasm and understanding to his audience with ease.
Fictive futures may very well seem dated at first glance as it discusses authors and a sense of things from the point of view of 1987 when it was written, but carries with many universal and still true points. Wallace discusses creative writing programs, teachers, students, the role of pop culture and the roll of how said culture and entertainment is delivered. He discusses film and television and fitting true to his nature, poses insightful questions and perceptions about where the culture is and where it is going in various respects made all the more interesting by the fact that it is now a quarter century later and we now have the benefit of hindsight and comparison.
Without doing a piece by piece review, I will simply say that this is a very approachable collection with familiar and understandable topics. I will not say that is collection is easy however, as the thing I enjoy most about Wallace's subjects and style is the challenge of his writing and the topics he writes about. They are often things I would not investigate on my own, but items none the less that are much appreciated and enjoyed through David Foster Wallace's looking glass.
Highly Recommended!!
First Posthumous Non-Fiction From Foster Wallace
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Too bad it's padded
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Would you try another book from David Foster Wallace and/or Robert Petkoff and Katherine Kellgren ?
NoHow would you have changed the story to make it more enjoyable?
Not sure about that.Which scene was your favorite?
N/ADo you think Both Flesh and Not needs a follow-up book? Why or why not?
Not for me.Any additional comments?
So I listened to this because I had heard about DFW and wanted to see what he was like. I understand he is very popular and well respected so maybe I am just missing something. He gets really obsessive about stuff that I just don't find that interesting, maybe it is just my personality but I found my mind wondering. He is obviously very smart and it is brilliantly written but the topics bored me. Highly recommended if you love literary analysis and tennis, emphasis on the tennis.What am I missing?
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Both Alive and Not
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Both Robert Petkoff and Katherine Kellgren^1 did a fantastic job with narration.
1. It does make me wonder how Katherine will put this on her resume. Does she say she was a narrator for Both Flesh and Not or a footnote narrator? Anyway, the narration worked well and showed how Hachette could have addressed the narration debacle that was Infinite Jest.
Both Perfect and Not
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Is there anything you would change about this book?
I wouldn't necessarily have left all of the essays included in the book. It's piecemeal of his material for various magazines over the year and, while insightful and certainly entertaining at spots, it's overall just *ok* and I certainly don't believe Wallace would have chosen these specific essays for a collection of his material (for the most part these essays were available for him to have chosen from previously and he clearly opted not to do so).Worth a read for the serious DFW fan
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