Authors on the Web
Buffalo News, May 12, 2013
...brings heart bypasses and cranky prostates. Of opposite kidney altogether among epistolary treasure houses is ?The Letters of William Gaddis,? a book even the writer often wished would never come to be before finally tacitly approving its planned...
Guardian.co.uk, May 11, 2013
...For the boldest, the obvious contenders would include Joyce's Finnegans Wake, David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest, William Gaddis's The Recognitions and Samuel Richardson's The History of Sir Charles Grandison (even longer than Clarissa, and much less...
Melbourne Age, May 10, 2013
...extract his DNA so she could have his baby. As far as anyone knows, it didn't work. William Gaddis thought he'd take a short walk around the lake to the Governor-General's reception. It took him half an hour and made him hot and thirsty. He made...
Denver Post, May 5, 2013
...where Jackson Pollock and Frank O'Hara hung out, to the White Horse Tavern, where Delmore Schwartz and William Gaddis did their drinking, to the Lion's Head, the longtime watering hole of Norman Mailer, Frank McCourt and Pete Hamill? Such questions of...
Pakistan Today, May 3, 2013
...As in his lifetime, William Gaddis (1922-98) remains a shadowy figure in 20th-century American fiction. When his first book, “The Recognitions,” appeared in 1955, the critics ignored, dismissed or misunderstood it. Two decades then passed...
Washington Post, May 1, 2013
...As in his lifetime, William Gaddis (1922-98) remains a shadowy figure in 20th-century American fiction. When his first book, The Recognitions, appeared in 1955, the critics ignored, dismissed or misunderstood it. Two decades then passed...
Washington Post, April 24, 2013
...Tavern, where Jackson Pollock and Frank OHara hung out, to the White Horse Tavern, where Delmore Schwartz and William Gaddis did their drinking, to the Lions Head, the longtime watering hole of Norman Mailer, Frank McCourt and Pete Hamill? (Ecco) - âThe...
Leeton Irrigator, May 11, 2013
...extract his DNA so she could have his baby. As far as anyone knows, it didn't work. William Gaddis thought he'd take a short walk around the lake to the Governor-General's reception. It took him half an hour and made him hot and thirsty. He made...
Macarthur Advertiser, May 11, 2013
...extract his DNA so she could have his baby. As far as anyone knows, it didn't work. William Gaddis thought he'd take a short walk around the lake to the Governor-General's reception. It took him half an hour and made him hot and thirsty. He made...
Young Witness, May 11, 2013
...extract his DNA so she could have his baby. As far as anyone knows, it didn't work. William Gaddis thought he'd take a short walk around the lake to the Governor-General's reception. It took him half an hour and made him hot and thirsty. He made...
Narromine News, May 11, 2013
...extract his DNA so she could have his baby. As far as anyone knows, it didn't work. William Gaddis thought he'd take a short walk around the lake to the Governor-General's reception. It took him half an hour and made him hot and thirsty. He made...
Guardian.co.uk, May 11, 2013
...For the boldest, the obvious contenders would include Joyce's Finnegans Wake, David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest, William Gaddis's The Recognitions and Samuel Richardson's The History of Sir Charles Grandison (even longer than Clarissa, and much less...
Walcha News, May 11, 2013
...extract his DNA so she could have his baby. As far as anyone knows, it didn't work. William Gaddis thought he'd take a short walk around the lake to the Governor-General's reception. It took him half an hour and made him hot and thirsty. He made...
Blue Mountains Gazette, May 11, 2013
...extract his DNA so she could have his baby. As far as anyone knows, it didn't work. William Gaddis thought he'd take a short walk around the lake to the Governor-General's reception. It took him half an hour and made him hot and thirsty. He made...













