33 “Wallace’s Achievement Was To Make Thinking About The Facts Of Postmodern Life… One Of The Keenest Pleasures Of Being Alive” 41WALLACE, David Foster. Infinite Jest. Boston, 1996. Thick octavo, original blue paper boards, dust jacket. $1100 First edition of Wallace’s epic postmodern satire— “jubilantly anecdotal, winkingly sardonic” (New York Times)—in scarce first-issue dust jacket. The “buzzing, claustrophobic energy” of Wallace’s “mammoth 1079-page satire of America” immediately placed him in the company of Pynchon and DeLillo (Wall Street Journal). Here, as in all his work, “Wallace’s achievement was to make thinking about the effects of postmodern life, and thinking about thinking about them, one of the keenest pleasures of being alive” (Slate). One year after publication of this acclaimed novel, a work hailed as “jubilantly anecdotal, windingly sardonic and self-consciously literary… Wallace received a MacArthur Foundation grant, the so-called genius award” (New York Times). He died tragically in 2008 at age 46. First issue dust jacket, with uncorrected “Vollman” on rear panel. Fine condition. “The World Is A Fine Place And Worth The Fighting For” 42HEMINGWAY, Ernest. For Whom the Bell Tolls. New York, 1940. Octavo, original beige cloth, dust jacket. $3000 First edition of this classic Hemingway novel, in firstissue dust jacket. “This is the best book Ernest Hemingway has written, the fullest, the deepest, the truest. It will, I think, be one of the major novels of American literature… Hemingway has struck universal chords, and he has struck them vibrantly” (J. Donald Adams). First issue, with Scribner’s “A” on copyright page, in first-issue dust jacket without photographer’s name. Hanneman A18a. Book fine, dust jacket very good with shallow chipping on bottom corners, a bit of chipping to spine head, a few short closed tears.
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