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Don DeLillo

Donald Richard DeLillo (born November 20, 1936) is an American novelist, short story writer, playwright, screenwriter and essayist. His works have covered subjects as diverse as television, nuclear war, the complexities of language, art, the advent of the Digital Age, mathematics, politics, economics, and sports.

Don DeLillo
DeLillo in 1988
BornDonald Richard DeLillo
(1936-11-20) November 20, 1936 (age 87)
New York City, U.S.
OccupationNovelist
Alma materFordham University
Period1960–present
Literary movementPostmodernism
Notable worksThe Names (1982)
White Noise (1985)
Libra (1988)
Mao II (1991)
Underworld (1997)
The Angel Esmeralda (2011)
Signature

DeLillo was already a well-regarded cult writer in 1985, when the publication of White Noise brought him widespread recognition and the National Book Award for fiction. He followed this in 1988 with Libra, a novel about the Kennedy assassination. DeLillo won the PEN/Faulkner Award for Mao II, about terrorism and the media's scrutiny of writers' private lives, and the William Dean Howells Medal for Underworld, a historical novel that ranges in time from the dawn of the Cold War to the birth of the Internet.[1][2] He was awarded the 1999 Jerusalem Prize, the 2010 PEN/Saul Bellow Award for Achievement in American Fiction in 2010, and the 2013 Library of Congress Prize for American Fiction.[3]

DeLillo has described his themes as "living in dangerous times" and "the inner life of the culture."[4] In a 2005 interview, he said that writers "must oppose systems. It's important to write against power, corporations, the state, and the whole system of consumption and of debilitating entertainments... I think writers, by nature, must oppose things, oppose whatever power tries to impose on us."[5]

Early life and influences edit

DeLillo was born on November 20, 1936, in New York City and grew up in an Italian Catholic family with ties to Molise, Italy, in an Italian-American neighborhood of the Bronx not far from Arthur Avenue.[6] Reflecting on his childhood in the Bronx, DeLillo said he was "always out in the street. As a little boy I whiled away most of my time pretending to be a baseball announcer on the radio. I could think up games for hours at a time. There were eleven of us in a small house, but the close quarters were never a problem. I didn't know things any other way. We always spoke English and Italian all mixed up together. My grandmother, who lived in America for fifty years, never learned English."[7]

As a teenager, DeLillo was not interested in writing until he took a summer job as a parking attendant, where the hours spent waiting and watching over vehicles led to a lifelong reading habit. Reflecting on this period, in a 2010 interview, he stated, "I had a personal golden age of reading in my 20s and my early 30s, and then my writing began to take up so much time".[8] Among the writers DeLillo read and was inspired by in this period were James Joyce, William Faulkner, Flannery O'Connor, and Ernest Hemingway, who was a major influence on DeLillo's earliest attempts at writing in his late teens.[9]

As well as the influence of modernist fiction, DeLillo has also cited the influence of jazz music—"guys like Ornette Coleman and Mingus and Coltrane and Miles Davis"—and postwar cinema: "Antonioni and Godard and Truffaut, and then in the '70s came the Americans, many of whom were influenced by the Europeans: Kubrick, Altman, Coppola, Scorsese and so on. I don't know how they may have affected the way I write, but I do have a visual sense."[10] Of the influence of film, particularly European cinema, on his work, DeLillo has said, "European and Asian cinemas of the 1960s shaped the way I think and feel about things. At that time I was living in New York, I didn't have much money, didn't have much work, I was living in one room...I was a man in a small room. And I went to the movies a lot, watching Bergman, Antonioni, Godard. When I was little, in the Bronx, I didn't go to the cinema, and I didn't think of the American films I saw as works of art. Perhaps, in an indirect way, cinema allowed me to become a writer."[11] He also credits his parents' leniency and acceptance of his desire to write for encouraging him to pursue a literary career: "They ultimately trusted me to follow the course I'd chosen. This is something that happens if you're the eldest son in an Italian family: You get a certain leeway, and it worked in my case."[12]

After graduating from Cardinal Hayes High School in the Bronx in 1954 and from Fordham University in the Bronx with a bachelor's degree in communication arts in 1958, DeLillo took a job in advertising because he could not get one in publishing. He worked for five years as a copywriter at Ogilvy & Mather on Fifth Avenue,[13] writing image ads for Sears Roebuck among others, working on "Print ads, very undistinguished accounts....I hadn't made the leap to television. I was just getting good at it when I left, in 1964."[14]

DeLillo published his first short story in 1960—"The River Jordan", in Epoch, Cornell University's literary magazine—and began to work on his first novel in 1966. Of the beginning of his writing career, DeLillo has said, "I did some short stories at that time but very infrequently. I quit my job just to quit. I didn't quit my job to write fiction. I just didn't want to work anymore."[15] Reflecting in 1993 on his relatively late start in writing novels, DeLillo said, "I wish I had started earlier, but evidently I wasn't ready. First, I lacked ambition. I may have had novels in my head but very little on paper and no personal goals, no burning desire to achieve some end. Second, I didn't have a sense of what it takes to be a serious writer. It took me a long time to develop this."[16] He cites William Gaddis's The Recognitions as a formative influence: "It was a revelation, a piece of writing with the beauty and texture of a Shakespearean monologue-or, maybe more apt, a work of Renaissance art impossibly transformed from image into words. And they were the words of a contemporary American. This, to me, was the wonder of it."[17]

Works edit

1970s edit

DeLillo's inaugural decade of novel writing has been his most productive to date, resulting in the writing and publication of six novels between 1971 and 1978.[8]

He resigned from the advertising industry in 1964, moved into a modest apartment near the Queens–Midtown Tunnel ("It wasn't Paris in the 1920s, but I was happy"), and began work on his first novel.[18] Of the early days of his writing career, he remarked: "I lived in a very minimal kind of way. My telephone would be $4.20 every month. I was paying a rent of sixty dollars a month. And I was becoming a writer. So in one sense, I was ignoring the movements of the time."[14] His first novel, Americana, was written over four years[6] and finally published in 1971, to modest critical praise. It concerned "a television network programmer who hits the road in search of the big picture".[6]

DeLillo revised the novel in 1989 for paperback reprinting. Reflecting on the novel later in his career, he said, "I don't think my first novel would have been published today as I submitted it. I don't think an editor would have read 50 pages of it. It was very overdone and shaggy, but two young editors saw something that seemed worth pursuing and eventually we all did some work on the book and it was published."[19] Later still, DeLillo continued to feel a degree of surprise that Americana was published: "I was working on my first novel, Americana, for two years before I ever realized that I could be a writer [...] I had absolutely no assurance that this book would be published because I knew that there were elements that I simply didn't know how to improve at that point. So I wrote for another two years and finished the novel. It wasn't all that difficult to find a publisher, to my astonishment. I didn't have a representative. I didn't know anything about publishing. But an editor at Houghton Mifflin read the manuscript and decided that this was worth pursuing."[12]

Americana was followed in rapid succession by the American college football/nuclear war black comedy End Zone (1972)—written under the working titles "The Self-Erasing Word" and "Modes of Disaster Technology"[20]—and the rock and roll satire Great Jones Street (1973), which DeLillo later felt was "one of the books I wish I'd done differently. It should be tighter, and probably a little funnier."[14] He married Barbara Bennett, a former banker turned landscape designer, in 1975.

DeLillo's fourth novel, Ratner's Star (1976)—which according to DeLillo is "structure[d] [...] on the writings of Lewis Carroll, in particular Alice in Wonderland and Alice Through the Looking Glass[5]—took two years to write and drew numerous favorable comparisons to the works of Thomas Pynchon.[16] This "conceptual monster", as DeLillo scholar Tom LeClair has called it, is "the picaresque story of a 14-year-old math genius who joins an international consortium of mad scientists decoding an alien message."[21] DeLillo has said it was both one of the most difficult books for him to write and his personal favorite.[22]

Following this early attempt at a major long novel, DeLillo ended the decade with two shorter works. Players (1977), originally conceived as "based on what could be called the intimacy of language—what people who live together really sound like",[23] concerned the lives of a young yuppie couple as the husband gets involved with a cell of domestic terrorists.[23] Its 1978 successor, Running Dog (1978), written in four months,[14] was a thriller about a hunt for a celluloid reel of Hitler's sexual exploits.

Of Running Dog, DeLillo remarked, "What I was really getting at in Running Dog was a sense of the terrible acquisitiveness in which we live coupled with a final indifference to the object. After all the mad attempts to acquire the thing, everyone suddenly decides that, well, maybe we really don't care about this so much anyway. This was something I felt characterized our lives at the time the book was written in the mid to late seventies. I think this was part of American consciousness then."[24]

In 1978, DeLillo was awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship, which he used to fund a trip around the Middle East before settling in Greece, where he wrote his next novels, Amazons and The Names.[8]

Of his first six novels and his rapid writing turnover later in his career, DeLillo said, "I wasn't learning to slow down and examine what I was doing more closely. I don't have regrets about that work, but I do think that if I had been a bit less hasty in starting each new book, I might have produced somewhat better work in the 1970s. My first novel took so long and was such an effort that once I was free of it, I almost became carefree in a sense and moved right through the decade, stopping, in a way, only at Ratner's Star (1976), which was an enormous challenge for me and probably a bigger challenge for the reader. But I slowed down in the 1980s and '90s."[8] DeLillo has also acknowledged some of the weaknesses of his 1970s works, reflecting in 2007: "I knew I wasn't doing utterly serious work, let me put it that way."[14]

1980s edit

The beginning of the 1980s saw the most unusual and uncharacteristic publication in DeLillo's career. The sports novel Amazons, a mock memoir of the first woman to play in the National Hockey League, is a far more lighthearted novel than his previous others. DeLillo published the novel under the pseudonym Cleo Birdwell, and later requested publishers compiling a bibliography for a reprint of a later novel to expunge the novel from their lists.[citation needed]

While DeLillo was living in Greece,[25] he took three years[22] to write The Names (1982), a complex thriller about "a risk analyst who crosses paths with a cult of assassins in the Middle East".[6] While lauded by an increasing number of critics, DeLillo was still relatively unknown outside small academic circles and did not reach a wide readership with this novel. Also in 1982, DeLillo finally broke his self-imposed ban on media coverage by giving his first major interview to Tom LeClair,[26] who had first tracked DeLillo down for an interview while he was in Greece in 1979. On that occasion, DeLillo handed LeClair a business card with his name printed on it and beneath that the message "I don't want to talk about it."[26]

With the 1985 publication of his eighth novel, White Noise, DeLillo rapidly became a noted and respected novelist. White Noise was arguably a major breakthrough both commercially and artistically for DeLillo, earning him a National Book Award for Fiction and a place in the canon of contemporary postmodern novelists.[27] DeLillo remained as detached as ever from his growing reputation: when called upon to give an acceptance speech for the award, he simply said, "I'm sorry I couldn't be here tonight, but I thank you all for coming," and then sat down.[13][28]

White Noise's influence can be seen in the writing of David Foster Wallace, Jonathan Lethem, Jonathan Franzen, Dave Eggers, Zadie Smith and Richard Powers (who provides an introduction to the 25th anniversary edition of the novel).[25] Among the 39 proposed titles for the novel were "All Souls", "Ultrasonic",[20] "The American Book of the Dead", "Psychic Data" and "Mein Kampf".[29] In 2005 DeLillo said "White Noise" was a fine choice, adding, "Once a title is affixed to a book, it becomes as indelible as a sentence or a paragraph."[29]

DeLillo followed White Noise with Libra (1988), a speculative fictionalized life of Lee Harvey Oswald up to the 1963 assassination of John F. Kennedy. DeLillo undertook a vast research project, which included reading at least half of the Warren Commission report (which DeLillo called "the Oxford English Dictionary of the assassination and also the Joycean novel. This is the one document that captures the full richness and madness and meaning of the event, despite the fact that it omits about a ton and a half of material.")[16] Written with the working titles "American Blood" and "Texas School Book", Libra became an international bestseller, one of five finalists for the National Book Award, and the winner of the next year's Irish Times Aer Lingus International Fiction Prize.[30]

The novel also elicited fierce critical division, with some critics praising DeLillo's take on the Kennedy assassination while others decried it. George Will, in The Washington Post, declared the book an affront to America and "an act of literary vandalism and bad citizenship".[31] DeLillo responded "I don't take it seriously, but being called a 'bad citizen' is a compliment to a novelist, at least to my mind. That's exactly what we ought to do. We ought to be bad citizens. We ought to, in the sense that we're writing against what power represents, and often what government represents, and what the corporation dictates, and what consumer consciousness has come to mean. In that sense, if we're bad citizens, we're doing our job."[32] In the same interview DeLillo rejected Will's claim that DeLillo blames America for Lee Harvey Oswald, countering that he instead blamed America for George Will. DeLillo has frequently reflected on the significance of the Kennedy assassination to not only his own work but American culture and history as a whole, remarking in 2005, "November 22nd, 1963, marked the real beginning of the 1960s. It was the beginning of a series of catastrophes: political assassinations, the war in Vietnam, the denial of Civil Rights and the revolts that occasioned, youth revolt in American cities, right up to Watergate. When I was starting out as a writer it seemed to me that a large part of the material you could find in my novels—this sense of fatality, of widespread suspicion, of mistrust—came from the assassination of JFK."[11]

1990s edit

DeLillo's concerns about the position of the novelist and the novel in a media- and terrorist-dominated society were made clear in his next novel, Mao II (1991). Influenced by the events surrounding the fatwa placed on Salman Rushdie and the intrusion of the press into the life of J. D. Salinger, Mao II earned DeLillo significant critical praise from, among others, John Banville and Thomas Pynchon.[6] It won the PEN/Faulkner Award in 1992.

Following Mao II, DeLillo went underground and spent several years writing and researching his 11th novel. In 1992, he published the folio short story "Pafko at the Wall" in Harper's Magazine. The piece recounts Bobby Thomson's Shot Heard 'Round the World from the perspective of various witnesses, real and fictional. He told The Paris Review: "Sometime in late 1991, I started writing something new and didn't know what it would be – a novel, a short story, a long story. It was simply a piece of writing, and it gave me more pleasure than any other writing I've done. It turned into a novella, Pafko at the Wall, and it appeared in Harper's about a year after I started it. At some point I decided I wasn't finished with the piece. I was sending signals into space and getting echoes back, like a dolphin or a bat. So the piece, slightly altered, is now the prologue to a novel-in-progress, which will have a different title. And the pleasure has long since faded into the slogging reality of the no man's land of the long novel. But I'm still hearing the echoes."[33]

This would become the prologue of his epic Cold War history Underworld. DeLillo took inspiration from the October 4, 1951, front page of The New York Times, which juxtaposed Thomson's home-run alongside the news that the Soviet Union had tested a hydrogen bomb.[34] The book was widely heralded as a masterpiece, with novelist and critic Martin Amis saying it marked "the ascension of a great writer."[35] Harold Bloom called it "the culmination of what Don can do."[36]

Underworld went on to become DeLillo's most acclaimed novel to date, achieving mainstream success and earning nominations for the National Book Award and the New York Times Best Books of the Year in 1997, and a second Pulitzer Prize for Fiction nomination in 1998.[37] The novel won the 1998 American Book Award and the William Dean Howells Medal in 2000.[38]

DeLillo later expressed surprise at Underworld's success. In 2007, he remarked: "When I finished with Underworld, I didn't really have any all-too-great hopes, to be honest. It's some pretty complicated stuff: 800 pages, more than 100 different characters—who's going to be interested in that?"[7] After rereading it in 2010, over ten years after its publication, DeLillo said that rereading it "made me wonder whether I would be capable of that kind of writing now—the range and scope of it. There are certain parts of the book where the exuberance, the extravagance, I don't know, the overindulgence....There are city scenes in New York that seem to transcend reality in a certain way."[13]

2000s edit

Although they have received some acclaim in places, DeLillo's post-Underworld novels have been often viewed by critics as "disappointing and slight, especially when held up against his earlier, big-canvas epics",[28] marking a shift "away from sweeping, era-defining novels" such as White Noise, Libra and Underworld to a more "spare and oblique"[28] style, characterized by "decreased length, the decommissioning of plot machinery and the steep deceleration of narrative time".[39]

DeLillo has said of this shift to shorter novels, "If a longer novel announces itself, I'll write it. A novel creates its own structure and develops its own terms. I tend to follow. And I never try to stretch what I sense is a compact book."[13] In a March 2010 interview, it was reported that DeLillo's deliberate stylistic shift had been informed by his having recently reread several slim but seminal European novels, including Albert Camus's The Stranger, Peter Handke's The Goalie's Anxiety at the Penalty Kick, and Max Frisch's Man in the Holocene.[8]

After the publication and extensive publicity drive for Underworld, DeLillo once again retreated from the spotlight to write his 12th novel, surfacing with The Body Artist in 2001. The novel has many established DeLillo preoccupations, particularly its interest in performance art and domestic privacies in relation to the wider scope of events. But it is very different in style and tone from the epic history of Underworld, and met with mixed critical reception.

DeLillo followed The Body Artist with 2003's Cosmopolis, a modern reinterpretation of James Joyce's Ulysses transposed to New York around the time of the collapse of the dot-com bubble in 2000. This novel was met at the time with a largely negative reception from critics, with several high-profile critics and novelists—notably John Updike—voicing their objections to its style and tone.

When asked in 2005 how he felt about the novel's mixed reception compared to the broader positive consensus afforded to Underworld, DeLillo remarked: "I try to stay detached from that aspect of my work as a writer. I didn't read any reviews or articles. Maybe it [the negative reception] was connected to September 11. I'd almost finished writing the book when the attacks took place, and so they couldn't have had any influence on the book's conception, nor on its writing. Perhaps for certain readers this upset their expectations."[11] Critical opinions have since been revised, the novel latterly being seen as prescient for its focus on the flaws and weaknesses of the international financial system and cybercapital.

DeLillo's papers were acquired in 2004 by the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center at the University of Texas at Austin,[40] reputedly for "half a million dollars".[20] There are "[one] hundred and twenty-five boxes" of DeLillo materials, including various drafts and correspondence.[20] Of his decision to donate his papers to the Ransom Center, DeLillo has said: "I ran out of space and also felt, as one does at a certain age, that I was running out of time. I didn't want to leave behind an enormous mess of papers for family members to deal with. Of course, I've since produced more paper—novel, play, essay, etc.—and so the cycle begins again."[20]

DeLillo published his final novel of the decade, Falling Man, in 2007. The novel concerns the impact on one family of the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center in New York, "an intimate story which is encompassed by a global event".[7] DeLillo said he originally "didn't ever want to write a novel about 9/11" and "had an idea for a different book" he had "been working on for half a year" in 2004 when he came up with the idea for the novel, beginning work on it following the reelection of George W. Bush that November.[7]

Although highly anticipated and eagerly awaited by critics, who felt that DeLillo was one of the contemporary writers best equipped to tackle the events of 9/11 in novelistic form, the novel met with a mixed critical reception and garnered no major literary awards or nominations. DeLillo remained unconcerned by this relative lack of critical acclaim, remarking in 2010, "In the 1970s, when I started writing novels, I was a figure in the margins, and that's where I belonged. If I'm headed back that way, that's fine with me because that's always where I felt I belonged. Things changed for me in the 1980s and 1990s, but I've always preferred to be somewhere in the corner of a room, observing."[13]

On July 24, 2009, Entertainment Weekly announced that David Cronenberg would adapt Cosmopolis for the screen, with "a view to eventually direct."[41] Cosmopolis, eventually released in 2012, became the first direct adaptation for the screen of a DeLillo novel, although both Libra and Underworld had previously been optioned for screen treatments. There were discussions about adapting End Zone, and DeLillo has written an original screenplay for the film Game 6.

DeLillo ended the decade by making an unexpected appearance at a PEN event on the steps of the New York City Public Library in support of Chinese dissident writer Liu Xiaobo, who was sentenced to 11 years in prison for "inciting subversion of state power" on December 31, 2009.[42]

2010s edit

 
DeLillo in New York City, 2011

DeLillo published Point Omega, his 15th novel, in February 2010. According to DeLillo, the novel considers an idea from "the writing of the Jesuit thinker and paleontologist [Pierre] Teilhard de Chardin."[19] The Omega Point of the title "[is] the possible idea that human consciousness is reaching a point of exhaustion and that what comes next may be either a paroxysm or something enormously sublime and unenvisionable."[19] Point Omega is DeLillo's shortest novel to date, and he has said it could be considered a companion piece to The Body Artist: "In its reflections on time and loss, this may be a philosophical novel and maybe, considering its themes, the book shares a place in my work with The Body Artist, another novel of abbreviated length."[43] Reviews were polarized, with some saying the novel was a return to form and innovative, while others complained about its brevity and lack of plot and engaging characters. Upon its initial release, Point Omega spent one week on The New York Times Best Seller list, peaking at No. 35 on the extended version of the list during its one-week stay on the list.[44]

In a January 29, 2010, interview with The Wall Street Journal, DeLillo discussed at great length Point Omega, his views of writing, and his plans for the future. When asked why his recent novels had been shorter, DeLillo replied, "Each book tells me what it wants or what it is, and I'd be perfectly content to write another long novel. It just has to happen."[19] While DeLillo is open to the idea of returning to the form of the long novel, the interview also revealed that he had no interest in doing as many of his literary contemporaries have done and writing a memoir.[19] DeLillo also made some observations on the state of literature and the challenges facing young writers:

It's tougher to be a young writer today than when I was a young writer. I don't think my first novel would have been published today as I submitted it. I don't think an editor would have read 50 pages of it. It was very overdone and shaggy, but two young editors saw something that seemed worth pursuing and eventually we all did some work on the book and it was published. I don't think publishers have that kind of tolerance these days, and I guess possibly as a result, more writers go to writing class now than then. I think first, fiction, and second, novels, are much more refined in terms of language, but they may tend to be too well behaved, almost in response to the narrower market.[19]

In a February 21, 2010, interview with The Times, DeLillo reaffirmed his belief in the validity and importance of the novel in a technology- and media-driven age, offering a more optimistic opinion of the future of the novel than his contemporary Philip Roth had done in a recent interview:

It is the form that allows a writer the greatest opportunity to explore human experience....For that reason, reading a novel is potentially a significant act. Because there are so many varieties of human experience, so many kinds of interaction between humans, and so many ways of creating patterns in the novel that can't be created in a short story, a play, a poem or a movie. The novel, simply, offers more opportunities for a reader to understand the world better, including the world of artistic creation. That sounds pretty grand, but I think it's true.[13]

DeLillo received two further significant literary awards in 2010: the St. Louis Literary Award on October 21, 2010 (previous recipients include Salman Rushdie, E.L. Doctorow, John Updike, William Gass, Joyce Carol Oates, Joan Didion and Tennessee Williams);[45] and his second PEN Award, the PEN/Saul Bellow Award for Achievement in American Fiction, on October 13, 2010.

DeLillo's first collection of short stories, The Angel Esmeralda: Nine Stories, covering short stories published between 1979 and 2011, was published in November 2011.[46] It received favorable reviews and was a finalist for both the 2012 Story Prize award[47] and the 2012 PEN/Faulkner award for Fiction,[48] as well as being longlisted for the Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award.[49] New York Times Book Review contributor Liesl Schillinger praised it, saying, "DeLillo packs fertile ruminations and potent consolation into each of these rich, dense, concentrated stories."[50]

DeLillo received the 2012 Carl Sandburg Literary Award on October 17, 2012, on the campus of the University of Illinois at Chicago. The prize is "presented annually to an acclaimed author in recognition of outstanding contributions to the literary world and honors a significant work or body of work that has enhanced the public's awareness of the written word."[51]

On January 29, 2013, Variety announced that Luca Guadagnino would direct an adaptation of The Body Artist called Body Art.[52] On April 26, 2013, it was announced that DeLillo had received the inaugural Library of Congress Prize for American Fiction (formerly the Library of Congress Creative Achievement Award for Fiction), with the presentation of the award due to take place during the 2013 Library of Congress National Book Festival, Sept. 21–22, 2013.[3][53][54][55]

The prize honors "an American literary writer whose body of work is distinguished not only for its mastery of the art but for its originality of thought and imagination. The award seeks to commend strong, unique, enduring voices that—throughout long, consistently accomplished careers—have told us something about the American experience."[3] In a statement issued in response to the award, DeLillo said, "When I received news of this award, my first thoughts were of my mother and father, who came to this country the hard way, as young people confronting a new language and culture. In a significant sense, the Library of Congress Prize is the culmination of their efforts and a tribute to their memory."[55]

In November 2012, DeLillo revealed that he was at work on a new novel, his 16th, and that "the [main] character spends a lot of time watching file footage on a wide screen, images of a disaster."[56][57] In August 2015, DeLillo's US publishers Simon and Schuster announced that the novel, Zero K, would be published in May 2016.[58] The advanced blurb for the novel is as follows:

Jeffrey Lockhart's father, Ross, is a George Soros-like billionaire now in his sixties, with a younger wife, Artis, whose health is failing. Ross is the primary investor in a deeply remote and secret compound where death is controlled and bodies are preserved until a future moment when medicine and technology can reawaken them. Jeffrey joins Ross and Artis at the compound to say "an uncertain farewell" to her as she surrenders her body. Ross Lockhart is not driven by the hope for immortality, for power and wealth beyond the grave. He is driven by love for his wife, for Artis, without whom he feels life is not worth living. It is that which compels him to submit to death long before his time. Jeffrey heartily disapproves. He is committed to living, to "the mingled astonishments of our time, here, on earth. "Thus begins an emotionally resonant novel that weighs the darkness of the world—terrorism, floods, fires, famine, death—against the beauty of everyday life; love, awe, "the intimate touch of earth and sun." Brilliantly observed and infused with humor, Don Delillo's Zero K is an acute observation about the fragility and meaning of life, about embracing our family, this world, our language, and our humanity.[58]

In November 2015, DeLillo received the 2015 Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters at the 66th National Book Awards Ceremony. The ceremony was held on November 8 in New York City, and he was presented his award by Pulitzer Prize winner Jennifer Egan, a writer profoundly influenced by DeLillo's work.[59] In his acceptance speech, DeLillo reflected upon his career as a reader as well as a writer, recalling examining his personal book collection and feeling a profound sense of personal connection to literature: "Here I'm not the writer at all, I'm a grateful reader. When I look at my bookshelves I find myself gazing like a museum-goer."[60] In February 2016, DeLillo was the guest of honor at an academic conference dedicated to his work, "Don DeLillo: Fiction Rescues History", a three-day event at the Sorbonne Nouvelle in Paris.[61]

Speaking to The Guardian in November 2018, DeLillo revealed work on a new novel, his 17th, "set three years in the future. But I'm not trying to imagine the future in the usual terms. I'm trying to imagine what has been torn apart and what can be put back together, and I don't know the answer. I hope I can arrive at an answer through writing the fiction."[62]

2020s edit

DeLillo's 17th novel, The Silence, was published by Scribner in October 2020. In February 2021, producer Uri Singer acquired the rights to the novel; later the same year, reports emerged that the playwright Jez Butterworth was planning to adapt The Silence for the screen.[63][64]

The first Library of America volume of DeLillo's writings was published in October 2022. The volume, titled Don DeLillo: Three Novels of the 1980s, collects the three major works DeLillo published during the decade: The Names (1982), White Noise (1985), and Libra (1988). The volume also features two nonfiction essays by DeLillo: "American Blood", about the assassinations of John F. Kennedy and Jack Ruby, and "Silhouette City", about neo-Nazis in contemporary America. It was edited by the DeLillo scholar Mark Osteen.[65] Mao II and Underworld are to be anthologized in the autumn of 2023.[66] He is one of a handful of authors so anthologized while alive; others include Eudora Welty, Philip Roth and Ursula K. Le Guin.

DeLillo lives near New York City in the suburb of Bronxville with his wife, Barbara Bennett.[13]

Plays edit

Since 1979, in addition to his novels and occasional essays, DeLillo has been active as a playwright. To date, DeLillo has written five major plays: The Engineer of Moonlight (1979), The Day Room (1986), Valparaiso (1999), Love Lies Bleeding (2006), and, most recently, The Word For Snow (2007). Stage adaptations have also been written for DeLillo's novels Libra and Mao II.

Of his work as a playwright, DeLillo has said that he feels his plays are not influenced by the same writers as his novels: "I'm not sure who influenced me [as a playwright]. I've seen some reviews that mention Beckett and Pinter, but I don't know what to say about that. I don't feel it myself."[67]

Themes and criticism edit

DeLillo's work displays elements of both modernism and postmodernism.[68][69] (Though it is worth noting that DeLillo himself claims not to know if his work is postmodern: "It is not [postmodern]. I'm the last guy to ask. If I had to classify myself, it would be in the long line of modernists, from James Joyce through William Faulkner and so on. That has always been my model.")[70] He has said the primary influences on his work and development are "abstract expressionism, foreign films, and jazz."[71] Many of DeLillo's books (notably White Noise) satirize academia and explore postmodern themes of rampant consumerism, novelty intellectualism, underground conspiracies, the disintegration and re-integration of the family, and the promise of rebirth through violence. Elsewhere, when asked about being labeled postmodern, DeLillo said: "I don't react. But I'd prefer not to be labeled. I'm a novelist, period. An American novelist."[72]

In several of his novels, DeLillo explores the idea of the increasing visibility and effectiveness of terrorists as societal actors and, consequently, the displacement of what he views to be artists', and particularly novelists', traditional role in facilitating social discourse (Players, Mao II, Falling Man). Another perpetual theme in DeLillo's books is the saturation of mass media and its role in forming simulacra, resulting in the removal of an event from its context and the consequent draining of meaning (see the highway shooter in Underworld, the televised disasters longed for in White Noise, the planes in Falling Man, the evolving story of the interviewee in Valparaiso). The psychology of crowds and the capitulation of individuals to group identity is a theme DeLillo examines in several of his novels, especially in the prologue to Underworld, Mao II, and Falling Man. In a 1993 interview with Maria Nadotti, DeLillo explained

My book (Mao II), in a way, is asking who is speaking to these people. Is it the writer who traditionally thought he could influence the imagination of his contemporaries or is it the totalitarian leader, the military man, the terrorist, those who are twisted by power and who seem capable of imposing their vision on the world, reducing the earth to a place of danger and anger. Things have changed a lot in recent years. One doesn't step onto an airplane in the same spirit as one did ten years ago: it's all different and this change has insinuated itself into our consciousness with the same force with which it insinuated itself into the visions of Beckett or Kafka.[73]

DeLillo's contemporary Joyce Carol Oates called him "a man of frightening perception."[74] Many younger authors, including Jennifer Egan, Jonathan Franzen and David Foster Wallace have cited DeLillo as an influence. Harold Bloom named him as one of the four major American novelists of his time, along with Philip Roth, Cormac McCarthy and Thomas Pynchon.[75] Robert McCrum included Underworld on his list of the 100 greatest English-language novels, calling it "the work of a writer wired into contemporary America from the ground up, spookily attuned to the weird vibrations of popular culture and the buzz of everyday, ordinary conversations on bus and subway."[76] In 2006, The New York Times Book Review sent out at a query asking for the "single best work of American fiction published in the last 25 years." Underworld was the runner-up, behind Toni Morrison's Beloved and ahead of McCarthy's Blood Meridian, John Updike's collected Rabbit Angstrom and Roth's American Pastoral. In the accompanying essay, A. O. Scott compared DeLillo's style to those of Updike and Roth: "Like American Pastoral, Underworld is a chronologically fractured story drawn by a powerful nostalgic undertow back to the redolent streets of a postwar Eastern city...but whereas Updike and Roth work to establish connection and coherence in the face of time's chaos, DeLillo is an artist of diffusion and dispersal, of implication and missing information. But more than his other books, Underworld is concerned with roots, in particular with ethnicity...and the characteristic rhythms of DeLillo's prose – the curious noun-verb inversions, the quick switches from abstraction to earthiness, from the decorous to the profane, are shown to arise, as surely as Roth's do, from the polyglot idiom of the old neighborhood."[38]

Critics of DeLillo argue that his novels are overly stylized and intellectually shallow. In James Wood's review of Zadie Smith's 2000 novel White Teeth, he dismissed the work of authors like DeLillo, Wallace, and Smith as "hysterical realism".[77] Bruce Bawer famously condemned DeLillo's novels insisting they weren't actually novels at all but "tracts, designed to batter us, again and again, with a single idea: that life in America today is boring, benumbing, dehumanized...It's better, DeLillo seems to say in one novel after another, to be a marauding murderous maniac – and therefore a human – than to sit still for America as it is, with its air conditioners, assembly lines, television sets, supermarkets, synthetic fabrics, and credit cards."[32][78]

B. R. Myers devoted an entire chapter ("Edgy Prose") of A Reader's Manifesto, his 2002 critique of recent American literary fiction, to dissecting passages from DeLillo's books and arguing that they're banal ideas badly written. Most critics, however, regard DeLillo as a gifted stylist; reviewing Mao II, Michiko Kakutani said that "The writing is dazzling; the images, so radioactive they glow afterward in our minds."[79]

References in popular culture edit

In film edit

  • In The Proposal (2009), the Canadian-born editor in chief of a New York publisher risks deportation to meet DeLillo at the Frankfurt Book Fair.
  • In The Matrix Resurrections, the character Thomas Anderson is in a bathroom stall reading the DeLillo quote: "It is so much simpler to bury reality than it is to dispose of dreams"

In music edit

Band names
Lyrics
  • Rhett Miller references Libra in his song "World Inside the World", saying: "I read it in DeLillo, like he'd written it for me". (The phrase "There is a world inside the world" appears several times in the book.)
  • Bright Eyes begins their song "Gold Mine Gutted" from Digital Ash in a Digital Urn with: "It was Don DeLillo, whiskey neat, and a blinking midnight clock. Speakers on the TV stand, just a turntable to watch.".
  • Too Much Joy's song "Sort of Haunted House", from Mutiny, is inspired by DeLillo.
  • Milo's song "The Gus Haynes Cribbage League" mentions him with the line: "I got hair like a pad of Brillo, and date girls whose dad could be Don DeLillo."

In publications edit

  • Paul Auster dedicated his books In the Country of Last Things and Leviathan to his friend Don DeLillo.
  • Ryan Boudinot and Neal Pollack[80] contributed humor pieces to the journal McSweeney's satirizing DeLillo.
  • A fictionalized DeLillo blogs for The Onion.[81]
  • A fictionalized version of DeLillo makes a few appearances as a minor character in A.M. Homes' 2012 novel May We Be Forgiven.
  • A fictionalized version of a younger, pre-fame DeLillo during his career as an advertising copywriter in New York, appears briefly as a minor character in David Bowman's posthumous third novel Big Bang (2019)[82][83]
  • Emma Cline's short story "White Noise", published June 1, 2020, by The New Yorker, features a fictionalized version of DeLillo. Harvey, the central character of the story and a fictionalized version of Harvey Weinstein, mistakes his neighbor for DeLillo and fantasizes about the two of them collaborating on a film version of White Noise.[84][85]

In reviews edit

Bibliography edit

Novels edit

Short fiction edit

Collections
Short stories
  • "The River Jordan" (1960) (First published in Epoch 10, No. 2 (Winter 1960), pp. 105–120)[a]
  • "Take the "A" Train" (1962) (First published in Epoch 12, No. 1 (Spring 1962) pp. 9–25.)[b]
  • "Spaghetti and Meatballs" (1965) (First published in Epoch 14, No. 3 (Spring 1965) pp. 244–250)[c]
  • "Coming Sun.Mon.Tues." (1966) (First published in Kenyon Review 28, No. 3 (June 1966), pp. 391–394.)[d]
  • "Baghdad Towers West" (1967) (First published in Epoch 17, No. 3 (Spring 1968), pp. 195–217.)[e]
  • "The Uniforms" (1970) (First published in Carolina Quarterly 22, 1970, pp. 4–11.)[f]
  • "In the Men's Room of the Sixteenth Century" (1971) (First published in Esquire, Dec. 1971, pp. 174–177, 243, 246.)[g]
  • "Total Loss Weekend" (1972) (First published in Sports Illustrated, November 27, 1972, pp. 98–101+)[h]
  • "Creation" (1979) (First published in Antaeus No. 33, Spring 1979, pp. 32–46.)[23]
  • "The Sightings" (1979) (First published in Weekend Magazine (Summer Fiction Issue, out of Toronto), August 4, 1979, pp. 26–30.)[23]
  • "Human Moments in World War III" (1983) (First published in Esquire, July 1983, pp. 118–126.)
  • "The Ivory Acrobat" (1988) (First published in Granta 25, Autumn 1988, pp. 199–212.)[i]
  • "The Runner" (1988) (First published in Harper's, Sept. 1988, pp. 61–63.)[j]
  • "Pafko at the Wall" (1992) (First published in Harper's, Oct. 1992, pp. 35–70.)
  • "The Angel Esmeralda" (1995) (First published in Esquire, May 1994, pp. 100–109.)[k]
  • "Baader-Meinhof" (2002) (First published in The New Yorker, April 1, 2002, pp. 78–82.)[l]
  • "The Border of Fallen Bodies" (2003) (First Published in Esquire, April 1, 2003)[m]
  • "Still Life" (2007) (First published in The New Yorker, April 9, 2007)[n]
  • "Midnight in Dostoevsky" (2009) (First Published in The New Yorker, November 30, 2009)[o]
  • "Hammer and Sickle" (2010) (First published in Harper's, Dec. 2010, pp. 63–74)[p]
  • "The Starveling" (2011) (First published in Granta 117, Autumn 2011)[q]
  • "Sine cosine tangent". The New Yorker. 92 (2): 60–65. February 22, 2016.
  • "The Itch" (2017) (First published in The New Yorker, July 31, 2017)[r]

Plays edit

Screenplays edit

Essays and reporting edit

  • "American Blood: A Journey through the Labyrinth of Dallas and JFK" (1983) (Published in Rolling Stone, December 8, 1983. DeLillo's first major published essay. Seen as signposting his interest in the JFK assassination that would ultimately lead to Libra)
  • "Salman Rushdie Defense" (1994) (Co-written with Paul Auster in defense of Salman Rushdie, following the announcement of a fatwa upon Rushdie after the publication of The Satanic Verses)[t]
  • "The Artist Naked in a Cage" (1997) (A short piece ran in The New Yorker on May 26, 1997, pages 6–7. An address delivered on May 13, 1997, at the New York Public Library's event "Stand In for Wei Jingsheng.")
  • "The Power of History" (1997) (Published in the September 7, 1997, issue of the New York Times Magazine. Preceded the publication of Underworld and was viewed by many as a rationale for the novel[citation needed])
  • "A History of the Writer Alone in a Room" (1999) (This piece is the acceptance address given by DeLillo on the occasion of being awarded the Jerusalem Prize in 1999. A small pamphlet was printed with this address, an address by Scribner editor-in-chief Nan Graham, the Jury's Citation, and an address by Jerusalem mayor Ehud Olmert.[citation needed] It was reprinted in a German translation in Die Zeit in 2001. The piece is in five numbered sections, and is about five pages long.)[citation needed]
  • "In the Ruins of the Future" (Dec 2001) (This short essay appeared in Harper's Magazine. It concerns the September 11 attacks, terrorism, and America and comprises eight numbered sections.)[u]
  • "Remembrance". Granta (108 (Chicago)): 68–69. Autumn 2009.[v]

———————

Notes
  1. ^ "Epoch Winter 1960". Epoch. Winter 1960.
  2. ^ "Epoch Spring 1962". Epoch. Spring 1962.
  3. ^ "Epoch Spring 1965". Epoch. Spring 1965.
  4. ^ "Kenyon Review Vol. 28, No. 3 (June 1966)". Kenyon College. June 1966.
  5. ^ "Epoch Spring 1968". Epoch. Spring 1968.
  6. ^ "Stories by Don DeLillo". perival.com. Retrieved January 4, 2023.
  7. ^ "In the Men's Room of the Sixteenth Century". Esquire. December 1971.
  8. ^ "Total Loss Weekend". Sports Illustrated. November 27, 1972.
  9. ^ "Granta 25: Murder". Granta. Autumn 1988.
  10. ^ "The Runner". Harper's. September 1988.
  11. ^ "The Angel Esmeralda". Esquire. May 1994.
  12. ^ "Baader-Meinhof". New Yorker. April 1, 2002.
  13. ^ "The Border of Fallen Bodies". Esquire. April 2003.
  14. ^ "Still Life". New Yorker. April 9, 2007.
  15. ^ "Midnight in Dostoevsky". New Yorker. November 30, 2009.
  16. ^ "Hammer and Sickle". Harper's. December 2010.
  17. ^ "Granta 117: Horror". Granta. Autumn 2011.
  18. ^ "The Itch". New Yorker. August 7, 2017.
  19. ^ a b c d e f . Perival. Archived from the original on May 17, 2022. Retrieved January 2, 2023.
  20. ^ "Salman Rushdie Defense Pamphlet". Perival. Retrieved January 2, 2023.
  21. ^ DeLillo, Don (December 2001). "In the Ruins of the Future". Harper's Magazine. pp. 33–40.
  22. ^ About Nelson Algren.

Awards and award nominations edit

References edit

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  2. ^ Kakutani, Michiko (September 16, 1997). "'Underworld' Of America as a Splendid Junk Heap". The New York Times.
  3. ^ a b c d "Prize for American Fiction Awarded to Don DeLillo". Library of Congress. April 25, 2013. Retrieved November 23, 2013.
  4. ^ Nance, Kevin (October 12, 2012). "Don DeLillo Talks About Writing – Page 3". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved November 23, 2013.
  5. ^ a b "Panic interview with DeLillo – 2005". Perival.com. Retrieved November 23, 2013.
  6. ^ a b c d e Passaro, Vince (May 19, 1991). "Dangerous Don DeLillo". The New York Times.
  7. ^ a b c d Amend, Christoph; Diez, Georg (October 11, 2007). . Die Zeit. Archived from the original on January 15, 2008. Retrieved December 30, 2011.
  8. ^ a b c d e "Dancing to the music of time". The Australian. March 6, 2010. Retrieved March 16, 2010.
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  15. ^ Passaro, Vince (May 19, 1991). "Dangerous Don DeLillo". The New York Times.
  16. ^ a b c Interviewed by Adam Begley (Fall 1993). "Don DeLillo, The Art of Fiction No. 135: Interviewed by Adam Begley". The Paris Review. Retrieved December 30, 2011.
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  46. ^ Books: The Angel Esmeralda. Simon & Schuster. November 15, 2011. ISBN 978-1-4423-4648-2. Retrieved December 30, 2011.
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  55. ^ a b Williams, John (April 25, 2013). "New Literary Prize Goes to DeLillo". The New York Times.
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Further reading edit

  • Adelman, Gary, Sorrow's Rigging: The Novels of Cormac McCarthy, Don Delillo, and Robert Stone, McGill-Queen's University Press, 2012.
  • Bloom, Harold (ed.), Don DeLillo (Bloom's Major Novelists), Chelsea House, 2003.
  • Boxall, Peter, Don DeLillo: The Possibility of Fiction, Routledge, 2006.
  • Civello, Paul, American Literary Naturalism and its Twentieth-century Transformations: Frank Norris, Ernest Hemingway, Don DeLillo, University of Georgia Press, 1994.
  • Cowart, David, Don DeLillo – The Physics of Language, University of Georgia Press, 2002.
  • Da Cunha Lewin, Katherine (ed.), Ward, Kiron (ed.), Don DeLillo: Contemporary Critical Perspectives, Bloomsbury Press, 2018.
  • Dewey, Joseph, Beyond Grief and Nothing: A Reading of Don DeLillo, University of South Carolina Press, 2006.
  • Dewey, Joseph (ed.), Kellman, Steven G. (ed.), Malin, Irving (ed.), Underwords: Perspectives on Don DeLillo's Underworld, University of Delaware Press, 2002.
  • Duvall, John, Don DeLillo's Underworld: A Reader's Guide, Continuum International Publishing Group, 2002.
  • Duvall, John (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Don DeLillo, Cambridge UP, 2008.
  • Ebbeson, Jeffrey, Postmodernism and its Others: The Fiction of Ishmael Reed, Kathy Acker, and Don DeLillo (Literary Criticism and Cultural Theory), Routledge, 2010.
  • Engles, Tim (ed.), Duvall, John (ed.), Approaches to Teaching DeLillo's White Noise, Modern Language Association Press, 2006.
  • Giaimo, Paul, "Appreciating Don DeLillo: The Moral Force of A Writer's Work", Praeger Publishers Inc, 2011.
  • Herren, Graley. The Self-Reflexive Art of Don DeLillo. Bloomsbury Press, 2020.
  • Halldorson, Stephanie, The Hero in Contemporary American Fiction: The Works of Saul Bellow and Don DeLillo, 2007.
  • Hantke, Steffen, Conspiracy and Paranoia in Contemporary American Fiction: The works of Don DeLillo and Joseph McElroy, Peter Lang Publishing, 1994.
  • Hugonnier, Francois, Archiving the Excesses of the Real: Don DeLillo's Falling Man, Presses Universitaires de Paris Ouest, 2016.
  • Kavadlo, Jesse, Don DeLillo: Balance at the Edge of Belief, Peter Lang Publishing, 2004.
  • Keesey, Douglas, Don DeLillo, Macmillan, 1993.
  • Laist, Randy, Technology and Postmodern Subjectivity in Don DeLillo's Novels, Peter Lang Publishing, 2010.
  • LeClair, Tom In the Loop – Don DeLillo and the Systems Novel, University of Illinois Press, 1987.
  • Lentricchia, Frank (ed.), Introducing Don DeLillo, Duke University Press, 1991.
  • Lentricchia, Frank (ed.), New Essays on White Noise, Cambridge University Press, 1991.
  • Martucci, Elise, The Environmental Unconscious in the Fiction of Don DeLillo, Routledge, 2007.
  • Morley, Catherine, The Quest for Epic in Contemporary American Literature, Routledge, 2008.
  • Naas, Michael. Don DeLillo, American Original: Drugs, Weapons, Erotica, and Other Literary Contraband, Bloomsbury, 2020.
  • Olster, Stacy (ed.), Don DeLillo: Mao II, Underworld, Falling Man (Continuum Studies in Contemporary North America Fiction), Continuum, 2011.
  • Orr, Leonard, White Noise: A Reader's Guide Continuum International Publishing Group, 2003.
  • Osteen, Mark American Magic and Dread: Don DeLillo's Dialogue with Culture, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2000.
  • Rey, Rebecca, Staging Don DeLillo, Routledge, 2016.
  • Ruppersburg, Hugh (ed.), Engles, Tim (ed.), Critical Essays on Don DeLillo, G.K. Hall, 2000.
  • Schneck, Peter & Schweighauser, Philipp (eds.),Terrorism, Media, and the Ethics of Fiction: Transatlantic Perspectives on Don Delillo, Continuum, 2010.
  • Schuster, Marc, "Don DeLillo, Jean Baudrillard, and the Consumer Conundrum", Cambria Press, 2008.
  • Shapiro, Michael J. "The politics of fear: DeLillo's postmodern burrow". In: Shapiro, Michael J. Reading the postmodern polity. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, pp. 122–139, 1992.
  • Sozalan, Azden, The American Nightmare: Don DeLillo's Falling Man and Cormac McCarthy's The Road, Authorhouse Publishing, 2011.
  • Taylor, Mark C, Rewiring the Real: In Conversation with William Gaddis, Richard Powers, Mark Danielewski, and Don DeLillo (Religion, Culture and Public Life), Columbia University Press, 2013.
  • Trainini, Marco, Don DeLillo, prefazione di Fabio Vittorini, Castelvecchi, Roma, 2016. ISBN 978-88-6944-739-6
  • Veggian, Henry, Understanding Don DeLillo, University of South Carolina Press, 2014.
  • Weinstein, Arnold, Nobody's Home: Speech, Self, and Place in American Fiction From Hawthorne to DeLillo, Oxford University Press, 1993.

External links edit

  • Don DeLillo Papers at the Harry Ransom Center
  • DeLillo 'Featured Authors' page at NY Times
  • Literary Encyclopedia Biography
  • Don DeLillo's America website focused on Don DeLillo's work since 1996
  • Don DeLillo Bibliography listing all work by DeLillo, including interviews, profiles, blurbs and other miscellaneous DeLillo writings
  • Jacobs, Timothy. "Don DeLillo." Conspiracy Theories in American History: An Encyclopedia. Ed. Peter Knight. Oxford: ABC-CLIO Press, 2003. 219–220.
  • Don DeLillo interview with Granta Magazine
  • Bookworm Interviews (Audio) with Michael Silverblatt: January 1998 September 4, 2015, at the Wayback Machine, June 2003 May 2, 2015, at the Wayback Machine, June 2003 May 2, 2015, at the Wayback Machine

delillo, donald, richard, delillo, born, november, 1936, american, novelist, short, story, writer, playwright, screenwriter, essayist, works, have, covered, subjects, diverse, television, nuclear, complexities, language, advent, digital, mathematics, politics,. Donald Richard DeLillo born November 20 1936 is an American novelist short story writer playwright screenwriter and essayist His works have covered subjects as diverse as television nuclear war the complexities of language art the advent of the Digital Age mathematics politics economics and sports Don DeLilloDeLillo in 1988BornDonald Richard DeLillo 1936 11 20 November 20 1936 age 87 New York City U S OccupationNovelistAlma materFordham UniversityPeriod1960 presentLiterary movementPostmodernismNotable worksThe Names 1982 White Noise 1985 Libra 1988 Mao II 1991 Underworld 1997 The Angel Esmeralda 2011 SignatureDeLillo was already a well regarded cult writer in 1985 when the publication of White Noise brought him widespread recognition and the National Book Award for fiction He followed this in 1988 with Libra a novel about the Kennedy assassination DeLillo won the PEN Faulkner Award for Mao II about terrorism and the media s scrutiny of writers private lives and the William Dean Howells Medal for Underworld a historical novel that ranges in time from the dawn of the Cold War to the birth of the Internet 1 2 He was awarded the 1999 Jerusalem Prize the 2010 PEN Saul Bellow Award for Achievement in American Fiction in 2010 and the 2013 Library of Congress Prize for American Fiction 3 DeLillo has described his themes as living in dangerous times and the inner life of the culture 4 In a 2005 interview he said that writers must oppose systems It s important to write against power corporations the state and the whole system of consumption and of debilitating entertainments I think writers by nature must oppose things oppose whatever power tries to impose on us 5 Contents 1 Early life and influences 2 Works 2 1 1970s 2 2 1980s 2 3 1990s 2 4 2000s 2 5 2010s 2 6 2020s 3 Plays 4 Themes and criticism 5 References in popular culture 5 1 In film 5 2 In music 5 3 In publications 5 4 In reviews 6 Bibliography 6 1 Novels 6 2 Short fiction 6 3 Plays 6 4 Screenplays 6 5 Essays and reporting 7 Awards and award nominations 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly life and influences editDeLillo was born on November 20 1936 in New York City and grew up in an Italian Catholic family with ties to Molise Italy in an Italian American neighborhood of the Bronx not far from Arthur Avenue 6 Reflecting on his childhood in the Bronx DeLillo said he was always out in the street As a little boy I whiled away most of my time pretending to be a baseball announcer on the radio I could think up games for hours at a time There were eleven of us in a small house but the close quarters were never a problem I didn t know things any other way We always spoke English and Italian all mixed up together My grandmother who lived in America for fifty years never learned English 7 As a teenager DeLillo was not interested in writing until he took a summer job as a parking attendant where the hours spent waiting and watching over vehicles led to a lifelong reading habit Reflecting on this period in a 2010 interview he stated I had a personal golden age of reading in my 20s and my early 30s and then my writing began to take up so much time 8 Among the writers DeLillo read and was inspired by in this period were James Joyce William Faulkner Flannery O Connor and Ernest Hemingway who was a major influence on DeLillo s earliest attempts at writing in his late teens 9 As well as the influence of modernist fiction DeLillo has also cited the influence of jazz music guys like Ornette Coleman and Mingus and Coltrane and Miles Davis and postwar cinema Antonioni and Godard and Truffaut and then in the 70s came the Americans many of whom were influenced by the Europeans Kubrick Altman Coppola Scorsese and so on I don t know how they may have affected the way I write but I do have a visual sense 10 Of the influence of film particularly European cinema on his work DeLillo has said European and Asian cinemas of the 1960s shaped the way I think and feel about things At that time I was living in New York I didn t have much money didn t have much work I was living in one room I was a man in a small room And I went to the movies a lot watching Bergman Antonioni Godard When I was little in the Bronx I didn t go to the cinema and I didn t think of the American films I saw as works of art Perhaps in an indirect way cinema allowed me to become a writer 11 He also credits his parents leniency and acceptance of his desire to write for encouraging him to pursue a literary career They ultimately trusted me to follow the course I d chosen This is something that happens if you re the eldest son in an Italian family You get a certain leeway and it worked in my case 12 After graduating from Cardinal Hayes High School in the Bronx in 1954 and from Fordham University in the Bronx with a bachelor s degree in communication arts in 1958 DeLillo took a job in advertising because he could not get one in publishing He worked for five years as a copywriter at Ogilvy amp Mather on Fifth Avenue 13 writing image ads for Sears Roebuck among others working on Print ads very undistinguished accounts I hadn t made the leap to television I was just getting good at it when I left in 1964 14 DeLillo published his first short story in 1960 The River Jordan in Epoch Cornell University s literary magazine and began to work on his first novel in 1966 Of the beginning of his writing career DeLillo has said I did some short stories at that time but very infrequently I quit my job just to quit I didn t quit my job to write fiction I just didn t want to work anymore 15 Reflecting in 1993 on his relatively late start in writing novels DeLillo said I wish I had started earlier but evidently I wasn t ready First I lacked ambition I may have had novels in my head but very little on paper and no personal goals no burning desire to achieve some end Second I didn t have a sense of what it takes to be a serious writer It took me a long time to develop this 16 He cites William Gaddis s The Recognitions as a formative influence It was a revelation a piece of writing with the beauty and texture of a Shakespearean monologue or maybe more apt a work of Renaissance art impossibly transformed from image into words And they were the words of a contemporary American This to me was the wonder of it 17 Works edit1970s edit DeLillo s inaugural decade of novel writing has been his most productive to date resulting in the writing and publication of six novels between 1971 and 1978 8 He resigned from the advertising industry in 1964 moved into a modest apartment near the Queens Midtown Tunnel It wasn t Paris in the 1920s but I was happy and began work on his first novel 18 Of the early days of his writing career he remarked I lived in a very minimal kind of way My telephone would be 4 20 every month I was paying a rent of sixty dollars a month And I was becoming a writer So in one sense I was ignoring the movements of the time 14 His first novel Americana was written over four years 6 and finally published in 1971 to modest critical praise It concerned a television network programmer who hits the road in search of the big picture 6 DeLillo revised the novel in 1989 for paperback reprinting Reflecting on the novel later in his career he said I don t think my first novel would have been published today as I submitted it I don t think an editor would have read 50 pages of it It was very overdone and shaggy but two young editors saw something that seemed worth pursuing and eventually we all did some work on the book and it was published 19 Later still DeLillo continued to feel a degree of surprise that Americana was published I was working on my first novel Americana for two years before I ever realized that I could be a writer I had absolutely no assurance that this book would be published because I knew that there were elements that I simply didn t know how to improve at that point So I wrote for another two years and finished the novel It wasn t all that difficult to find a publisher to my astonishment I didn t have a representative I didn t know anything about publishing But an editor at Houghton Mifflin read the manuscript and decided that this was worth pursuing 12 Americana was followed in rapid succession by the American college football nuclear war black comedy End Zone 1972 written under the working titles The Self Erasing Word and Modes of Disaster Technology 20 and the rock and roll satire Great Jones Street 1973 which DeLillo later felt was one of the books I wish I d done differently It should be tighter and probably a little funnier 14 He married Barbara Bennett a former banker turned landscape designer in 1975 DeLillo s fourth novel Ratner s Star 1976 which according to DeLillo is structure d on the writings of Lewis Carroll in particular Alice in Wonderland and Alice Through the Looking Glass 5 took two years to write and drew numerous favorable comparisons to the works of Thomas Pynchon 16 This conceptual monster as DeLillo scholar Tom LeClair has called it is the picaresque story of a 14 year old math genius who joins an international consortium of mad scientists decoding an alien message 21 DeLillo has said it was both one of the most difficult books for him to write and his personal favorite 22 Following this early attempt at a major long novel DeLillo ended the decade with two shorter works Players 1977 originally conceived as based on what could be called the intimacy of language what people who live together really sound like 23 concerned the lives of a young yuppie couple as the husband gets involved with a cell of domestic terrorists 23 Its 1978 successor Running Dog 1978 written in four months 14 was a thriller about a hunt for a celluloid reel of Hitler s sexual exploits Of Running Dog DeLillo remarked What I was really getting at in Running Dog was a sense of the terrible acquisitiveness in which we live coupled with a final indifference to the object After all the mad attempts to acquire the thing everyone suddenly decides that well maybe we really don t care about this so much anyway This was something I felt characterized our lives at the time the book was written in the mid to late seventies I think this was part of American consciousness then 24 In 1978 DeLillo was awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship which he used to fund a trip around the Middle East before settling in Greece where he wrote his next novels Amazons and The Names 8 Of his first six novels and his rapid writing turnover later in his career DeLillo said I wasn t learning to slow down and examine what I was doing more closely I don t have regrets about that work but I do think that if I had been a bit less hasty in starting each new book I might have produced somewhat better work in the 1970s My first novel took so long and was such an effort that once I was free of it I almost became carefree in a sense and moved right through the decade stopping in a way only at Ratner s Star 1976 which was an enormous challenge for me and probably a bigger challenge for the reader But I slowed down in the 1980s and 90s 8 DeLillo has also acknowledged some of the weaknesses of his 1970s works reflecting in 2007 I knew I wasn t doing utterly serious work let me put it that way 14 1980s edit The beginning of the 1980s saw the most unusual and uncharacteristic publication in DeLillo s career The sports novel Amazons a mock memoir of the first woman to play in the National Hockey League is a far more lighthearted novel than his previous others DeLillo published the novel under the pseudonym Cleo Birdwell and later requested publishers compiling a bibliography for a reprint of a later novel to expunge the novel from their lists citation needed While DeLillo was living in Greece 25 he took three years 22 to write The Names 1982 a complex thriller about a risk analyst who crosses paths with a cult of assassins in the Middle East 6 While lauded by an increasing number of critics DeLillo was still relatively unknown outside small academic circles and did not reach a wide readership with this novel Also in 1982 DeLillo finally broke his self imposed ban on media coverage by giving his first major interview to Tom LeClair 26 who had first tracked DeLillo down for an interview while he was in Greece in 1979 On that occasion DeLillo handed LeClair a business card with his name printed on it and beneath that the message I don t want to talk about it 26 With the 1985 publication of his eighth novel White Noise DeLillo rapidly became a noted and respected novelist White Noise was arguably a major breakthrough both commercially and artistically for DeLillo earning him a National Book Award for Fiction and a place in the canon of contemporary postmodern novelists 27 DeLillo remained as detached as ever from his growing reputation when called upon to give an acceptance speech for the award he simply said I m sorry I couldn t be here tonight but I thank you all for coming and then sat down 13 28 White Noise s influence can be seen in the writing of David Foster Wallace Jonathan Lethem Jonathan Franzen Dave Eggers Zadie Smith and Richard Powers who provides an introduction to the 25th anniversary edition of the novel 25 Among the 39 proposed titles for the novel were All Souls Ultrasonic 20 The American Book of the Dead Psychic Data and Mein Kampf 29 In 2005 DeLillo said White Noise was a fine choice adding Once a title is affixed to a book it becomes as indelible as a sentence or a paragraph 29 DeLillo followed White Noise with Libra 1988 a speculative fictionalized life of Lee Harvey Oswald up to the 1963 assassination of John F Kennedy DeLillo undertook a vast research project which included reading at least half of the Warren Commission report which DeLillo called the Oxford English Dictionary of the assassination and also the Joycean novel This is the one document that captures the full richness and madness and meaning of the event despite the fact that it omits about a ton and a half of material 16 Written with the working titles American Blood and Texas School Book Libra became an international bestseller one of five finalists for the National Book Award and the winner of the next year s Irish Times Aer Lingus International Fiction Prize 30 The novel also elicited fierce critical division with some critics praising DeLillo s take on the Kennedy assassination while others decried it George Will in The Washington Post declared the book an affront to America and an act of literary vandalism and bad citizenship 31 DeLillo responded I don t take it seriously but being called a bad citizen is a compliment to a novelist at least to my mind That s exactly what we ought to do We ought to be bad citizens We ought to in the sense that we re writing against what power represents and often what government represents and what the corporation dictates and what consumer consciousness has come to mean In that sense if we re bad citizens we re doing our job 32 In the same interview DeLillo rejected Will s claim that DeLillo blames America for Lee Harvey Oswald countering that he instead blamed America for George Will DeLillo has frequently reflected on the significance of the Kennedy assassination to not only his own work but American culture and history as a whole remarking in 2005 November 22nd 1963 marked the real beginning of the 1960s It was the beginning of a series of catastrophes political assassinations the war in Vietnam the denial of Civil Rights and the revolts that occasioned youth revolt in American cities right up to Watergate When I was starting out as a writer it seemed to me that a large part of the material you could find in my novels this sense of fatality of widespread suspicion of mistrust came from the assassination of JFK 11 1990s edit DeLillo s concerns about the position of the novelist and the novel in a media and terrorist dominated society were made clear in his next novel Mao II 1991 Influenced by the events surrounding the fatwa placed on Salman Rushdie and the intrusion of the press into the life of J D Salinger Mao II earned DeLillo significant critical praise from among others John Banville and Thomas Pynchon 6 It won the PEN Faulkner Award in 1992 Following Mao II DeLillo went underground and spent several years writing and researching his 11th novel In 1992 he published the folio short story Pafko at the Wall in Harper s Magazine The piece recounts Bobby Thomson s Shot Heard Round the World from the perspective of various witnesses real and fictional He told The Paris Review Sometime in late 1991 I started writing something new and didn t know what it would be a novel a short story a long story It was simply a piece of writing and it gave me more pleasure than any other writing I ve done It turned into a novella Pafko at the Wall and it appeared in Harper s about a year after I started it At some point I decided I wasn t finished with the piece I was sending signals into space and getting echoes back like a dolphin or a bat So the piece slightly altered is now the prologue to a novel in progress which will have a different title And the pleasure has long since faded into the slogging reality of the no man s land of the long novel But I m still hearing the echoes 33 This would become the prologue of his epic Cold War history Underworld DeLillo took inspiration from the October 4 1951 front page of The New York Times which juxtaposed Thomson s home run alongside the news that the Soviet Union had tested a hydrogen bomb 34 The book was widely heralded as a masterpiece with novelist and critic Martin Amis saying it marked the ascension of a great writer 35 Harold Bloom called it the culmination of what Don can do 36 Underworld went on to become DeLillo s most acclaimed novel to date achieving mainstream success and earning nominations for the National Book Award and the New York Times Best Books of the Year in 1997 and a second Pulitzer Prize for Fiction nomination in 1998 37 The novel won the 1998 American Book Award and the William Dean Howells Medal in 2000 38 DeLillo later expressed surprise at Underworld s success In 2007 he remarked When I finished with Underworld I didn t really have any all too great hopes to be honest It s some pretty complicated stuff 800 pages more than 100 different characters who s going to be interested in that 7 After rereading it in 2010 over ten years after its publication DeLillo said that rereading it made me wonder whether I would be capable of that kind of writing now the range and scope of it There are certain parts of the book where the exuberance the extravagance I don t know the overindulgence There are city scenes in New York that seem to transcend reality in a certain way 13 2000s edit Although they have received some acclaim in places DeLillo s post Underworld novels have been often viewed by critics as disappointing and slight especially when held up against his earlier big canvas epics 28 marking a shift away from sweeping era defining novels such as White Noise Libra and Underworld to a more spare and oblique 28 style characterized by decreased length the decommissioning of plot machinery and the steep deceleration of narrative time 39 DeLillo has said of this shift to shorter novels If a longer novel announces itself I ll write it A novel creates its own structure and develops its own terms I tend to follow And I never try to stretch what I sense is a compact book 13 In a March 2010 interview it was reported that DeLillo s deliberate stylistic shift had been informed by his having recently reread several slim but seminal European novels including Albert Camus s The Stranger Peter Handke s The Goalie s Anxiety at the Penalty Kick and Max Frisch s Man in the Holocene 8 After the publication and extensive publicity drive for Underworld DeLillo once again retreated from the spotlight to write his 12th novel surfacing with The Body Artist in 2001 The novel has many established DeLillo preoccupations particularly its interest in performance art and domestic privacies in relation to the wider scope of events But it is very different in style and tone from the epic history of Underworld and met with mixed critical reception DeLillo followed The Body Artist with 2003 s Cosmopolis a modern reinterpretation of James Joyce s Ulysses transposed to New York around the time of the collapse of the dot com bubble in 2000 This novel was met at the time with a largely negative reception from critics with several high profile critics and novelists notably John Updike voicing their objections to its style and tone When asked in 2005 how he felt about the novel s mixed reception compared to the broader positive consensus afforded to Underworld DeLillo remarked I try to stay detached from that aspect of my work as a writer I didn t read any reviews or articles Maybe it the negative reception was connected to September 11 I d almost finished writing the book when the attacks took place and so they couldn t have had any influence on the book s conception nor on its writing Perhaps for certain readers this upset their expectations 11 Critical opinions have since been revised the novel latterly being seen as prescient for its focus on the flaws and weaknesses of the international financial system and cybercapital DeLillo s papers were acquired in 2004 by the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center at the University of Texas at Austin 40 reputedly for half a million dollars 20 There are one hundred and twenty five boxes of DeLillo materials including various drafts and correspondence 20 Of his decision to donate his papers to the Ransom Center DeLillo has said I ran out of space and also felt as one does at a certain age that I was running out of time I didn t want to leave behind an enormous mess of papers for family members to deal with Of course I ve since produced more paper novel play essay etc and so the cycle begins again 20 DeLillo published his final novel of the decade Falling Man in 2007 The novel concerns the impact on one family of the 9 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center in New York an intimate story which is encompassed by a global event 7 DeLillo said he originally didn t ever want to write a novel about 9 11 and had an idea for a different book he had been working on for half a year in 2004 when he came up with the idea for the novel beginning work on it following the reelection of George W Bush that November 7 Although highly anticipated and eagerly awaited by critics who felt that DeLillo was one of the contemporary writers best equipped to tackle the events of 9 11 in novelistic form the novel met with a mixed critical reception and garnered no major literary awards or nominations DeLillo remained unconcerned by this relative lack of critical acclaim remarking in 2010 In the 1970s when I started writing novels I was a figure in the margins and that s where I belonged If I m headed back that way that s fine with me because that s always where I felt I belonged Things changed for me in the 1980s and 1990s but I ve always preferred to be somewhere in the corner of a room observing 13 On July 24 2009 Entertainment Weekly announced that David Cronenberg would adapt Cosmopolis for the screen with a view to eventually direct 41 Cosmopolis eventually released in 2012 became the first direct adaptation for the screen of a DeLillo novel although both Libra and Underworld had previously been optioned for screen treatments There were discussions about adapting End Zone and DeLillo has written an original screenplay for the film Game 6 DeLillo ended the decade by making an unexpected appearance at a PEN event on the steps of the New York City Public Library in support of Chinese dissident writer Liu Xiaobo who was sentenced to 11 years in prison for inciting subversion of state power on December 31 2009 42 2010s edit nbsp DeLillo in New York City 2011DeLillo published Point Omega his 15th novel in February 2010 According to DeLillo the novel considers an idea from the writing of the Jesuit thinker and paleontologist Pierre Teilhard de Chardin 19 The Omega Point of the title is the possible idea that human consciousness is reaching a point of exhaustion and that what comes next may be either a paroxysm or something enormously sublime and unenvisionable 19 Point Omega is DeLillo s shortest novel to date and he has said it could be considered a companion piece to The Body Artist In its reflections on time and loss this may be a philosophical novel and maybe considering its themes the book shares a place in my work with The Body Artist another novel of abbreviated length 43 Reviews were polarized with some saying the novel was a return to form and innovative while others complained about its brevity and lack of plot and engaging characters Upon its initial release Point Omega spent one week on The New York Times Best Seller list peaking at No 35 on the extended version of the list during its one week stay on the list 44 In a January 29 2010 interview with The Wall Street Journal DeLillo discussed at great length Point Omega his views of writing and his plans for the future When asked why his recent novels had been shorter DeLillo replied Each book tells me what it wants or what it is and I d be perfectly content to write another long novel It just has to happen 19 While DeLillo is open to the idea of returning to the form of the long novel the interview also revealed that he had no interest in doing as many of his literary contemporaries have done and writing a memoir 19 DeLillo also made some observations on the state of literature and the challenges facing young writers It s tougher to be a young writer today than when I was a young writer I don t think my first novel would have been published today as I submitted it I don t think an editor would have read 50 pages of it It was very overdone and shaggy but two young editors saw something that seemed worth pursuing and eventually we all did some work on the book and it was published I don t think publishers have that kind of tolerance these days and I guess possibly as a result more writers go to writing class now than then I think first fiction and second novels are much more refined in terms of language but they may tend to be too well behaved almost in response to the narrower market 19 In a February 21 2010 interview with The Times DeLillo reaffirmed his belief in the validity and importance of the novel in a technology and media driven age offering a more optimistic opinion of the future of the novel than his contemporary Philip Roth had done in a recent interview It is the form that allows a writer the greatest opportunity to explore human experience For that reason reading a novel is potentially a significant act Because there are so many varieties of human experience so many kinds of interaction between humans and so many ways of creating patterns in the novel that can t be created in a short story a play a poem or a movie The novel simply offers more opportunities for a reader to understand the world better including the world of artistic creation That sounds pretty grand but I think it s true 13 DeLillo received two further significant literary awards in 2010 the St Louis Literary Award on October 21 2010 previous recipients include Salman Rushdie E L Doctorow John Updike William Gass Joyce Carol Oates Joan Didion and Tennessee Williams 45 and his second PEN Award the PEN Saul Bellow Award for Achievement in American Fiction on October 13 2010 DeLillo s first collection of short stories The Angel Esmeralda Nine Stories covering short stories published between 1979 and 2011 was published in November 2011 46 It received favorable reviews and was a finalist for both the 2012 Story Prize award 47 and the 2012 PEN Faulkner award for Fiction 48 as well as being longlisted for the Frank O Connor International Short Story Award 49 New York Times Book Review contributor Liesl Schillinger praised it saying DeLillo packs fertile ruminations and potent consolation into each of these rich dense concentrated stories 50 DeLillo received the 2012 Carl Sandburg Literary Award on October 17 2012 on the campus of the University of Illinois at Chicago The prize is presented annually to an acclaimed author in recognition of outstanding contributions to the literary world and honors a significant work or body of work that has enhanced the public s awareness of the written word 51 On January 29 2013 Variety announced that Luca Guadagnino would direct an adaptation of The Body Artist called Body Art 52 On April 26 2013 it was announced that DeLillo had received the inaugural Library of Congress Prize for American Fiction formerly the Library of Congress Creative Achievement Award for Fiction with the presentation of the award due to take place during the 2013 Library of Congress National Book Festival Sept 21 22 2013 3 53 54 55 The prize honors an American literary writer whose body of work is distinguished not only for its mastery of the art but for its originality of thought and imagination The award seeks to commend strong unique enduring voices that throughout long consistently accomplished careers have told us something about the American experience 3 In a statement issued in response to the award DeLillo said When I received news of this award my first thoughts were of my mother and father who came to this country the hard way as young people confronting a new language and culture In a significant sense the Library of Congress Prize is the culmination of their efforts and a tribute to their memory 55 In November 2012 DeLillo revealed that he was at work on a new novel his 16th and that the main character spends a lot of time watching file footage on a wide screen images of a disaster 56 57 In August 2015 DeLillo s US publishers Simon and Schuster announced that the novel Zero K would be published in May 2016 58 The advanced blurb for the novel is as follows Jeffrey Lockhart s father Ross is a George Soros like billionaire now in his sixties with a younger wife Artis whose health is failing Ross is the primary investor in a deeply remote and secret compound where death is controlled and bodies are preserved until a future moment when medicine and technology can reawaken them Jeffrey joins Ross and Artis at the compound to say an uncertain farewell to her as she surrenders her body Ross Lockhart is not driven by the hope for immortality for power and wealth beyond the grave He is driven by love for his wife for Artis without whom he feels life is not worth living It is that which compels him to submit to death long before his time Jeffrey heartily disapproves He is committed to living to the mingled astonishments of our time here on earth Thus begins an emotionally resonant novel that weighs the darkness of the world terrorism floods fires famine death against the beauty of everyday life love awe the intimate touch of earth and sun Brilliantly observed and infused with humor Don Delillo s Zero K is an acute observation about the fragility and meaning of life about embracing our family this world our language and our humanity 58 In November 2015 DeLillo received the 2015 Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters at the 66th National Book Awards Ceremony The ceremony was held on November 8 in New York City and he was presented his award by Pulitzer Prize winner Jennifer Egan a writer profoundly influenced by DeLillo s work 59 In his acceptance speech DeLillo reflected upon his career as a reader as well as a writer recalling examining his personal book collection and feeling a profound sense of personal connection to literature Here I m not the writer at all I m a grateful reader When I look at my bookshelves I find myself gazing like a museum goer 60 In February 2016 DeLillo was the guest of honor at an academic conference dedicated to his work Don DeLillo Fiction Rescues History a three day event at the Sorbonne Nouvelle in Paris 61 Speaking to The Guardian in November 2018 DeLillo revealed work on a new novel his 17th set three years in the future But I m not trying to imagine the future in the usual terms I m trying to imagine what has been torn apart and what can be put back together and I don t know the answer I hope I can arrive at an answer through writing the fiction 62 2020s edit Parts of this article those related to this section need to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information January 2023 DeLillo s 17th novel The Silence was published by Scribner in October 2020 In February 2021 producer Uri Singer acquired the rights to the novel later the same year reports emerged that the playwright Jez Butterworth was planning to adapt The Silence for the screen 63 64 The first Library of America volume of DeLillo s writings was published in October 2022 The volume titled Don DeLillo Three Novels of the 1980s collects the three major works DeLillo published during the decade The Names 1982 White Noise 1985 and Libra 1988 The volume also features two nonfiction essays by DeLillo American Blood about the assassinations of John F Kennedy and Jack Ruby and Silhouette City about neo Nazis in contemporary America It was edited by the DeLillo scholar Mark Osteen 65 Mao II and Underworld are to be anthologized in the autumn of 2023 66 He is one of a handful of authors so anthologized while alive others include Eudora Welty Philip Roth and Ursula K Le Guin DeLillo lives near New York City in the suburb of Bronxville with his wife Barbara Bennett 13 Plays editSince 1979 in addition to his novels and occasional essays DeLillo has been active as a playwright To date DeLillo has written five major plays The Engineer of Moonlight 1979 The Day Room 1986 Valparaiso 1999 Love Lies Bleeding 2006 and most recently The Word For Snow 2007 Stage adaptations have also been written for DeLillo s novels Libra and Mao II Of his work as a playwright DeLillo has said that he feels his plays are not influenced by the same writers as his novels I m not sure who influenced me as a playwright I ve seen some reviews that mention Beckett and Pinter but I don t know what to say about that I don t feel it myself 67 Themes and criticism editDeLillo s work displays elements of both modernism and postmodernism 68 69 Though it is worth noting that DeLillo himself claims not to know if his work is postmodern It is not postmodern I m the last guy to ask If I had to classify myself it would be in the long line of modernists from James Joyce through William Faulkner and so on That has always been my model 70 He has said the primary influences on his work and development are abstract expressionism foreign films and jazz 71 Many of DeLillo s books notably White Noise satirize academia and explore postmodern themes of rampant consumerism novelty intellectualism underground conspiracies the disintegration and re integration of the family and the promise of rebirth through violence Elsewhere when asked about being labeled postmodern DeLillo said I don t react But I d prefer not to be labeled I m a novelist period An American novelist 72 In several of his novels DeLillo explores the idea of the increasing visibility and effectiveness of terrorists as societal actors and consequently the displacement of what he views to be artists and particularly novelists traditional role in facilitating social discourse Players Mao II Falling Man Another perpetual theme in DeLillo s books is the saturation of mass media and its role in forming simulacra resulting in the removal of an event from its context and the consequent draining of meaning see the highway shooter in Underworld the televised disasters longed for in White Noise the planes in Falling Man the evolving story of the interviewee in Valparaiso The psychology of crowds and the capitulation of individuals to group identity is a theme DeLillo examines in several of his novels especially in the prologue to Underworld Mao II and Falling Man In a 1993 interview with Maria Nadotti DeLillo explained My book Mao II in a way is asking who is speaking to these people Is it the writer who traditionally thought he could influence the imagination of his contemporaries or is it the totalitarian leader the military man the terrorist those who are twisted by power and who seem capable of imposing their vision on the world reducing the earth to a place of danger and anger Things have changed a lot in recent years One doesn t step onto an airplane in the same spirit as one did ten years ago it s all different and this change has insinuated itself into our consciousness with the same force with which it insinuated itself into the visions of Beckett or Kafka 73 DeLillo s contemporary Joyce Carol Oates called him a man of frightening perception 74 Many younger authors including Jennifer Egan Jonathan Franzen and David Foster Wallace have cited DeLillo as an influence Harold Bloom named him as one of the four major American novelists of his time along with Philip Roth Cormac McCarthy and Thomas Pynchon 75 Robert McCrum included Underworld on his list of the 100 greatest English language novels calling it the work of a writer wired into contemporary America from the ground up spookily attuned to the weird vibrations of popular culture and the buzz of everyday ordinary conversations on bus and subway 76 In 2006 The New York Times Book Review sent out at a query asking for the single best work of American fiction published in the last 25 years Underworld was the runner up behind Toni Morrison s Beloved and ahead of McCarthy s Blood Meridian John Updike s collected Rabbit Angstrom and Roth s American Pastoral In the accompanying essay A O Scott compared DeLillo s style to those of Updike and Roth Like American Pastoral Underworld is a chronologically fractured story drawn by a powerful nostalgic undertow back to the redolent streets of a postwar Eastern city but whereas Updike and Roth work to establish connection and coherence in the face of time s chaos DeLillo is an artist of diffusion and dispersal of implication and missing information But more than his other books Underworld is concerned with roots in particular with ethnicity and the characteristic rhythms of DeLillo s prose the curious noun verb inversions the quick switches from abstraction to earthiness from the decorous to the profane are shown to arise as surely as Roth s do from the polyglot idiom of the old neighborhood 38 Critics of DeLillo argue that his novels are overly stylized and intellectually shallow In James Wood s review of Zadie Smith s 2000 novel White Teeth he dismissed the work of authors like DeLillo Wallace and Smith as hysterical realism 77 Bruce Bawer famously condemned DeLillo s novels insisting they weren t actually novels at all but tracts designed to batter us again and again with a single idea that life in America today is boring benumbing dehumanized It s better DeLillo seems to say in one novel after another to be a marauding murderous maniac and therefore a human than to sit still for America as it is with its air conditioners assembly lines television sets supermarkets synthetic fabrics and credit cards 32 78 B R Myers devoted an entire chapter Edgy Prose of A Reader s Manifesto his 2002 critique of recent American literary fiction to dissecting passages from DeLillo s books and arguing that they re banal ideas badly written Most critics however regard DeLillo as a gifted stylist reviewing Mao II Michiko Kakutani said that The writing is dazzling the images so radioactive they glow afterward in our minds 79 References in popular culture editIn film edit In The Proposal 2009 the Canadian born editor in chief of a New York publisher risks deportation to meet DeLillo at the Frankfurt Book Fair In The Matrix Resurrections the character Thomas Anderson is in a bathroom stall reading the DeLillo quote It is so much simpler to bury reality than it is to dispose of dreams In music edit Band namesThe band The Airborne Toxic Event takes its name from a chemical gas leak of the same name in DeLillo s White Noise LyricsRhett Miller references Libra in his song World Inside the World saying I read it in DeLillo like he d written it for me The phrase There is a world inside the world appears several times in the book Bright Eyes begins their song Gold Mine Gutted from Digital Ash in a Digital Urn with It was Don DeLillo whiskey neat and a blinking midnight clock Speakers on the TV stand just a turntable to watch Too Much Joy s song Sort of Haunted House from Mutiny is inspired by DeLillo Milo s song The Gus Haynes Cribbage League mentions him with the line I got hair like a pad of Brillo and date girls whose dad could be Don DeLillo In publications edit Paul Auster dedicated his books In the Country of Last Things and Leviathan to his friend Don DeLillo Ryan Boudinot and Neal Pollack 80 contributed humor pieces to the journal McSweeney s satirizing DeLillo A fictionalized DeLillo blogs for The Onion 81 A fictionalized version of DeLillo makes a few appearances as a minor character in A M Homes 2012 novel May We Be Forgiven A fictionalized version of a younger pre fame DeLillo during his career as an advertising copywriter in New York appears briefly as a minor character in David Bowman s posthumous third novel Big Bang 2019 82 83 Emma Cline s short story White Noise published June 1 2020 by The New Yorker features a fictionalized version of DeLillo Harvey the central character of the story and a fictionalized version of Harvey Weinstein mistakes his neighbor for DeLillo and fantasizes about the two of them collaborating on a film version of White Noise 84 85 In reviews edit David Foster Wallace saluted DeLillo Cynthia Ozick and Cormac McCarthy as three of the greatest living fiction authors in the United States 86 Bibliography editThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items June 2015 Novels edit Americana 1971 End Zone 1972 Great Jones Street 1973 Ratner s Star 1976 Players 1977 Running Dog 1978 Amazons 1980 under pseudonym Cleo Birdwell The Names 1982 White Noise 1985 Libra 1988 Mao II 1991 Underworld 1997 The Body Artist 2001 Cosmopolis 2003 Falling Man 2007 Point Omega 2010 Zero K 2016 The Silence 2020 Short fiction edit CollectionsThe Angel Esmeralda Nine Stories 2011 Short stories The River Jordan 1960 First published in Epoch 10 No 2 Winter 1960 pp 105 120 a Take the A Train 1962 First published in Epoch 12 No 1 Spring 1962 pp 9 25 b Spaghetti and Meatballs 1965 First published in Epoch 14 No 3 Spring 1965 pp 244 250 c Coming Sun Mon Tues 1966 First published in Kenyon Review 28 No 3 June 1966 pp 391 394 d Baghdad Towers West 1967 First published in Epoch 17 No 3 Spring 1968 pp 195 217 e The Uniforms 1970 First published in Carolina Quarterly 22 1970 pp 4 11 f In the Men s Room of the Sixteenth Century 1971 First published in Esquire Dec 1971 pp 174 177 243 246 g Total Loss Weekend 1972 First published in Sports Illustrated November 27 1972 pp 98 101 h Creation 1979 First published in Antaeus No 33 Spring 1979 pp 32 46 23 The Sightings 1979 First published in Weekend Magazine Summer Fiction Issue out of Toronto August 4 1979 pp 26 30 23 Human Moments in World War III 1983 First published in Esquire July 1983 pp 118 126 The Ivory Acrobat 1988 First published in Granta 25 Autumn 1988 pp 199 212 i The Runner 1988 First published in Harper s Sept 1988 pp 61 63 j Pafko at the Wall 1992 First published in Harper s Oct 1992 pp 35 70 The Angel Esmeralda 1995 First published in Esquire May 1994 pp 100 109 k Baader Meinhof 2002 First published in The New Yorker April 1 2002 pp 78 82 l The Border of Fallen Bodies 2003 First Published in Esquire April 1 2003 m Still Life 2007 First published in The New Yorker April 9 2007 n Midnight in Dostoevsky 2009 First Published in The New Yorker November 30 2009 o Hammer and Sickle 2010 First published in Harper s Dec 2010 pp 63 74 p The Starveling 2011 First published in Granta 117 Autumn 2011 q Sine cosine tangent The New Yorker 92 2 60 65 February 22 2016 The Itch 2017 First published in The New Yorker July 31 2017 r Plays edit Mother 1966 s The Engineer of Moonlight 1979 s The Day Room first production 1986 The Rapture of the Athlete Assumed into Heaven 1990 s Game 6 1991 s Libra 1994 s Valparaiso first production 1999 The Mystery at the Middle of Ordinary Life 2000 s Love Lies Bleeding first production 2005 The Word for Snow first production in 2007 Screenplays edit Game 6 2005 the story of a playwright played by Michael Keaton and his obsession with the Boston Red Sox and the 1986 World Series was written in the early 1990s but wasn t produced until 2005 ironically one year after the Red Sox won their first World Series title in 86 years To date it is DeLillo s only work for film Essays and reporting edit American Blood A Journey through the Labyrinth of Dallas and JFK 1983 Published in Rolling Stone December 8 1983 DeLillo s first major published essay Seen as signposting his interest in the JFK assassination that would ultimately lead to Libra Salman Rushdie Defense 1994 Co written with Paul Auster in defense of Salman Rushdie following the announcement of a fatwa upon Rushdie after the publication of The Satanic Verses t The Artist Naked in a Cage 1997 A short piece ran in The New Yorker on May 26 1997 pages 6 7 An address delivered on May 13 1997 at the New York Public Library s event Stand In for Wei Jingsheng The Power of History 1997 Published in the September 7 1997 issue of the New York Times Magazine Preceded the publication of Underworld and was viewed by many as a rationale for the novel citation needed A History of the Writer Alone in a Room 1999 This piece is the acceptance address given by DeLillo on the occasion of being awarded the Jerusalem Prize in 1999 A small pamphlet was printed with this address an address by Scribner editor in chief Nan Graham the Jury s Citation and an address by Jerusalem mayor Ehud Olmert citation needed It was reprinted in a German translation in Die Zeit in 2001 The piece is in five numbered sections and is about five pages long citation needed In the Ruins of the Future Dec 2001 This short essay appeared in Harper s Magazine It concerns the September 11 attacks terrorism and America and comprises eight numbered sections u Remembrance Granta 108 Chicago 68 69 Autumn 2009 v Notes Epoch Winter 1960 Epoch Winter 1960 Epoch Spring 1962 Epoch Spring 1962 Epoch Spring 1965 Epoch Spring 1965 Kenyon Review Vol 28 No 3 June 1966 Kenyon College June 1966 Epoch Spring 1968 Epoch Spring 1968 Stories by Don DeLillo perival com Retrieved January 4 2023 In the Men s Room of the Sixteenth Century Esquire December 1971 Total Loss Weekend Sports Illustrated November 27 1972 Granta 25 Murder Granta Autumn 1988 The Runner Harper s September 1988 The Angel Esmeralda Esquire May 1994 Baader Meinhof New Yorker April 1 2002 The Border of Fallen Bodies Esquire April 2003 Still Life New Yorker April 9 2007 Midnight in Dostoevsky New Yorker November 30 2009 Hammer and Sickle Harper s December 2010 Granta 117 Horror Granta Autumn 2011 The Itch New Yorker August 7 2017 a b c d e f Plays Screenplays by Don DeLillo Perival Archived from the original on May 17 2022 Retrieved January 2 2023 Salman Rushdie Defense Pamphlet Perival Retrieved January 2 2023 DeLillo Don December 2001 In the Ruins of the Future Harper s Magazine pp 33 40 About Nelson Algren Awards and award nominations edit1979 Guggenheim Fellowship 1984 Award in Literature from the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters 1985 National Book Award Fiction for White Noise 27 1985 National Book Critics Circle Award finalist Fiction 1985 for White Noise 1988 National Book Critics Circle Award finalist Fiction 1988 for Libra 1988 The New York Times Best Books of the Year 1988 for Libra 1988 National Book Award finalist Fiction for Libra 87 1989 Election to the American Academy of Arts and Letters 88 1989 Irish Times Aer Lingus International Fiction Prize for Libra 1992 PEN Faulkner Award for Mao II 1992 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction nomination for Mao II 1995 Lila Wallace Reader s Digest Award 1997 National Book Award finalist Fiction for Underworld 37 1997 National Book Critics Circle Award finalist Fiction 1997 for Underworld 1997 New York Times Best Books of the Year nominee for Underworld 1998 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction nomination for Underworld 1998 American Book Award for Underworld 1999 Jerusalem Prize 1999 International Dublin Literary Award shortlist for Underworld 2000 William Dean Howells Medal awarded for Underworld 2000 Riccardo Bacchelli International Award for Underworld 2001 James Tait Black Memorial Prize shortlist Fiction 2001 for The Body Artist 2003 International Dublin Literary Award longlist for The Body Artist 2006 New York Times Best Work of American Fiction of the Last 25 Years runner up for Underworld 2007 The New York Times Notable Book of the Year Fiction and Poetry for Falling Man 2007 Booklist Top of the List A Best of Editors Choice for Falling Man 2007 Nominee for Man Booker International Prize 2009 Common Wealth Award of Distinguished Service for achievements in literature 2009 International Dublin Literary Award longlist for Falling Man 2010 St Louis Literary Award from the Saint Louis University Library Associates 89 2010 PEN Saul Bellow Award for Achievement in American Fiction 90 2011 The New York Times 100 Notable Books of 2011 list for The Angel Esmeralda 2012 The Story Prize finalist for The Angel Esmeralda 2012 PEN Faulkner Award for Fiction finalist for The Angel Esmeralda 2012 Frank O Connor International Short Story Award longlist for The Angel Esmeralda 2012 Carl Sandburg Literary Award 2012 International Dublin Literary Award longlist for Point Omega 2013 Library of Congress Prize for American Fiction 3 53 91 2014 Norman Mailer Prize for Lifetime Achievement 92 2015 National Book Foundation Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters 92 References edit Moore Lorrie June 9 1991 Look for a Writer and Find a Terrorist The New York Times Kakutani Michiko September 16 1997 Underworld Of America as a Splendid Junk Heap The New York Times a b c d Prize for American Fiction Awarded to Don DeLillo Library of Congress April 25 2013 Retrieved November 23 2013 Nance Kevin October 12 2012 Don DeLillo Talks About Writing Page 3 Chicago Tribune Retrieved November 23 2013 a b Panic interview with DeLillo 2005 Perival com Retrieved November 23 2013 a b c d e Passaro Vince May 19 1991 Dangerous Don DeLillo The New York Times a b c d Amend Christoph Diez Georg October 11 2007 Dum Pendebat Filius Translation of Ich kenne Amerika nicht mehr I don t know America anymore Die Zeit Archived from the original on January 15 2008 Retrieved December 30 2011 a b c d e Dancing to the music of time The Australian March 6 2010 Retrieved March 16 2010 DeLillo Interview by Peter Henning 2003 Perival com Archived from the original on November 23 2011 Retrieved December 30 2011 Nance Kevin October 12 2012 Don DeLillo talks about writing Page 2 Chicago Tribune Retrieved November 23 2013 a b c http www perival com delillo delillo panic interview 2005 html dead link a b Charles Ron April 25 2013 Don DeLillo is first recipient of Library of Congress Prize for American Fiction The Washington Post Retrieved November 23 2013 a b c d e f g Caesar Ed February 21 2010 Don DeLillo A writer like no other The Sunday Times London Retrieved August 20 2010 a b c d e Intensity of a Plot Mark Binelli interviews Don DeLillo Guernica July 2007 Archived from the original on February 14 2012 Retrieved December 30 2011 Passaro Vince May 19 1991 Dangerous Don DeLillo The New York Times a b c Interviewed by Adam Begley Fall 1993 Don DeLillo The Art of Fiction No 135 Interviewed by Adam Begley The Paris Review Retrieved December 30 2011 Biblioklept September 14 2014 Don DeLillo on William Gaddis Biblioklept Retrieved April 10 2023 mean streak artforum com scene amp herd Artforum com Retrieved November 23 2013 a b c d e f Alter Alexandra January 29 2010 Don DeLillo Deconstructed The Wall Street Journal Retrieved March 16 2010 a b c d e D T Max Letter from Austin Final Destination The New Yorker Retrieved November 23 2013 Published May 7 2007 Our Guide to the Don DeLillo Oeuvre New York Magazine Nymag com Retrieved March 16 2010 a b Harris Robert R October 10 1982 A Talk with Don DeLillo The New York Times a b c d Players Don DeLillo 1977 Perival com December 18 2012 Retrieved November 23 2013 Running Dog Don DeLillo 1978 Perival com January 30 2010 Retrieved November 23 2013 a b Rayner Richard January 3 2010 Tuning back in to White Noise Los Angeles Times Retrieved March 16 2010 a b Leclair Thomas Delillo Don Winter 1982 An Interview with Don DeLillo Conducted by Thomas LeClair Contemporary Literature 23 1 19 31 doi 10 2307 1208140 JSTOR 1208140 a b National Book Awards 1985 National Book Foundation Retrieved 2012 03 28 With essays by Courtney Eldridge Matthew Pitt and Jess Walter from the Awards 60 year anniversary blog a b c Alter Alexandra January 30 2010 What Don DeLillo s Books Tell Him Wall Street Journal Retrieved April 19 2022 a b White Noise Don DeLillo 1985 Perival com Retrieved November 23 2013 Don DLillo Wins Irish Fiction Prize The New York Times September 24 1989 DeLillo Detractors Perival com Retrieved March 16 2010 a b Remnick David Exile on Main Street Don DeLillo s Undisclosed Underworld The New Yorker September 15 1997 Begley Adam The Art of Fiction No 135 The Paris Review Giants Capture Pennant Beating Dodgers 5 4 in 9th on Thomson s 3 Run Homer The New York Times October 4 1951 Amis Martin October 5 1997 Survivors of the Cold War The New York Times Price Leonard June 15 2009 Harold Bloom on Blood Meridian The A V Club a b National Book Awards 1997 National Book Foundation Retrieved March 28 2012 a b Scott A O May 21 2006 In Search of the Best The New York Times O Connell Mark September 9 2012 The Angel Esmeralda Nine Stories by Don DeLillo review The Observer London Retrieved November 23 2013 Ransom Center Acquires Archive of Noted American Novelist Don DeLillo HRC News October 20 2004 Archived from the original on April 23 2007 David Cronenberg journeys to Cosmopolis Entertainment Weekly July 24 2009 Archived from the original on July 26 2009 Retrieved March 16 2010 PEN American Center Writers Rally for Release of Liu Xiaobo Pen org December 31 2009 Archived from the original on March 27 2010 Retrieved March 16 2010 Hales Dianne R February 1 2010 Don DeLillo The Barnes amp Noble Review Barnes amp Noble Archived from the original on November 11 2013 Retrieved November 23 2013 Schuessler Jennifer February 18 2010 TBR Inside the List NYTimes com Retrieved March 16 2010 Henderson Jane August 24 2010 DeLillo to receive STL Literary Award St Louis Post Dispatch Retrieved December 30 2011 Books The Angel Esmeralda Simon amp Schuster November 15 2011 ISBN 978 1 4423 4648 2 Retrieved December 30 2011 The Story Prize The Story Prize Retrieved November 23 2013 About the Winner amp Finalists PEN Faulkner Foundation www penfaulkner org Archived from the original on December 20 2012 The Frank O Connor Frankoconnor shortstory award net Archived from the original on December 3 2013 Retrieved November 23 2013 Schillinger Liesl November 17 2011 Don DeLillo and the Varieties of American Unease The New York Times Carl Sandburg Literary Awards Dinner Chicago Public Library Foundation October 23 2013 Archived from the original on December 2 2013 Retrieved November 23 2013 Hopewell John January 29 2013 Cronenberg DeLillo Branco reteam for Body Art Variety Retrieved November 23 2013 a b Charles Ron April 25 2013 Don DeLillo is first recipient of Library of Congress Prize for American Fiction The Washington Post Retrieved November 23 2013 DeLillo Wins Inaugural Library of Congress Prize for American Fiction The Daily Beast April 25 2013 Retrieved November 23 2013 a b Williams John April 25 2013 New Literary Prize Goes to DeLillo The New York Times Cosmopolis Interviews Rob Pattinson David Cronenberg Don Delillo Oh No They Didn tcom April 23 2012 Retrieved November 23 2013 Nance Kevin October 12 2012 Don DeLillo talks about writing Chicago Tribune Retrieved November 23 2013 a b Delillo Don May 3 2016 Zero K ISBN 978 1 5011 3807 2 via www simonandschuster com Sturgeon Jonathon Don DeLillo to Receive National Book Award for Contribution to American Letters Flavorwire Don DeLillo to receive NBF Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters Archived from the original on April 23 2016 Retrieved April 26 2016 Archived copy Archived from the original on November 18 2015 Retrieved April 26 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Brooks Xan November 6 2018 Don DeLillo on Trump s America I m not sure the country is recoverable The Guardian Retrieved November 8 2018 Lang Brent October 12 2021 Jez Butterworth Adapting Don DeLillo s The Silence EXCLUSIVE Retrieved March 17 2022 N Duka Amanda February 24 2021 White Noise Producer Uri Singer Acquires Rights To Don DeLillo s The Silence Retrieved March 17 2022 Don DeLillo Three Novels of the 1980s Library of America www loa org Retrieved April 4 2023 Forthcoming Fall 2023 Library of America www loa org Retrieved April 4 2023 Freeman John March 5 2006 Q amp A Don DeLillo It s not as easy as it looks DeLillo talks about writing plays watching sports and movies and defining love and death San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved November 23 2013 John N Duvall May 29 2008 The Cambridge Companion to Don DeLillo Cambridge University Press p 13 ISBN 978 1 139 82808 6 Katherine Da Cunha Lewin amp Kiron Ward October 4 2018 Don DeLillo Bloomsbury Academic pp 1 4 ISBN 978 1 350 04087 8 Singer Dale Take Five Don t call Don DeLillo s fiction postmodern Archived from the original on April 23 2015 Retrieved July 16 2014 DePietro Thomas ed 2005 Conversations With Don DeLillo University Press of Mississippi p 128 ISBN 1 57806 704 9 DePietro Thomas ed 2005 Conversations With Don DeLillo University Press of Mississippi p 115 ISBN 1 57806 704 9 DePietro Thomas ed 2005 Conversations With Don DeLillo University Press of Mississippi p 110 ISBN 1 57806 704 9 McCrum Robert August 7 2010 Don DeLillo I m not trying to manipulate reality this is what I see and hear The Guardian Bloom Harold September 24 2003 Dumbing down American readers The Boston Globe Retrieved March 16 2010 McCrum Robert August 3 2015 The 100 best novels No 98 Underworld by Don DeLillo 1997 The Guardian Human All Too Inhuman New Republic July 24 2000 Retrieved February 8 2017 Rutter Benjamin July 29 2010 Hegel on the Modern Arts Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 48978 2 Kakutani Michiko May 28 1991 Fighting Against Envelopment by the Mass Mind The New York Times McSweeney s Internet Tendency DeLillo in the Outback Mcsweeneys net Archived from the original on May 29 2010 Retrieved March 16 2010 Don DeLillo The Onion America s Finest News Source The Onion Archived from the original on February 19 2010 Retrieved March 16 2010 Big Bang is a quixotic quasi history of the wild years before JFK s assassination Los Angeles Times January 15 2019 Williams John February 10 2019 An Encyclopedic Novel Intent on Reliving the Baby Boomers Touchstone Moments All of Them The New York Times Cline Emma White Noise The New Yorker Retrieved August 6 2020 Davidson Willing Emma Cline on Fictionalizing a MeToo Villain The New Yorker Retrieved August 6 2020 Brief Interview with a Five Draft Man Extra Amherst College www amherst edu Retrieved May 9 2023 National Book Awards 1988 National Book Foundation Retrieved March 28 2012 American Academy of Arts and Letters Members www artsandletters org Website of St Louis Literary Award Archived from the original on August 23 2016 Retrieved July 25 2016 Cohen Patricia September 23 2010 PEN American Center Names Award Winners ArtsBeat The New York Times Retrieved December 30 2011 Haq Husna April 25 2013 Don DeLillo becomes first writer to receive the Library of Congress Prize for American Fiction Christian Science Monitor Retrieved November 23 2013 a b Macmillan Pan Don DeLillo s new novel Zero K to be published by Picador in 2016 Pan Macmillan Retrieved March 17 2022 Further reading editAdelman Gary Sorrow s Rigging The Novels of Cormac McCarthy Don Delillo and Robert Stone McGill Queen s University Press 2012 Bloom Harold ed Don DeLillo Bloom s Major Novelists Chelsea House 2003 Boxall Peter Don DeLillo The Possibility of Fiction Routledge 2006 Civello Paul American Literary Naturalism and its Twentieth century Transformations Frank Norris Ernest Hemingway Don DeLillo University of Georgia Press 1994 Cowart David Don DeLillo The Physics of Language University of Georgia Press 2002 Da Cunha Lewin Katherine ed Ward Kiron ed Don DeLillo Contemporary Critical Perspectives Bloomsbury Press 2018 Dewey Joseph Beyond Grief and Nothing A Reading of Don DeLillo University of South Carolina Press 2006 Dewey Joseph ed Kellman Steven G ed Malin Irving ed Underwords Perspectives on Don DeLillo s Underworld University of Delaware Press 2002 Duvall John Don DeLillo s Underworld A Reader s Guide Continuum International Publishing Group 2002 Duvall John ed The Cambridge Companion to Don DeLillo Cambridge UP 2008 Ebbeson Jeffrey Postmodernism and its Others The Fiction of Ishmael Reed Kathy Acker and Don DeLillo Literary Criticism and Cultural Theory Routledge 2010 Engles Tim ed Duvall John ed Approaches to Teaching DeLillo s White Noise Modern Language Association Press 2006 Giaimo Paul Appreciating Don DeLillo The Moral Force of A Writer s Work Praeger Publishers Inc 2011 Herren Graley The Self Reflexive Art of Don DeLillo Bloomsbury Press 2020 Halldorson Stephanie The Hero in Contemporary American Fiction The Works of Saul Bellow and Don DeLillo 2007 Hantke Steffen Conspiracy and Paranoia in Contemporary American Fiction The works of Don DeLillo and Joseph McElroy Peter Lang Publishing 1994 Hugonnier Francois Archiving the Excesses of the Real Don DeLillo s Falling Man Presses Universitaires de Paris Ouest 2016 Kavadlo Jesse Don DeLillo Balance at the Edge of Belief Peter Lang Publishing 2004 Keesey Douglas Don DeLillo Macmillan 1993 Laist Randy Technology and Postmodern Subjectivity in Don DeLillo s Novels Peter Lang Publishing 2010 LeClair Tom In the Loop Don DeLillo and the Systems Novel University of Illinois Press 1987 Lentricchia Frank ed Introducing Don DeLillo Duke University Press 1991 Lentricchia Frank ed New Essays on White Noise Cambridge University Press 1991 Martucci Elise The Environmental Unconscious in the Fiction of Don DeLillo Routledge 2007 Morley Catherine The Quest for Epic in Contemporary American Literature Routledge 2008 Naas Michael Don DeLillo American Original Drugs Weapons Erotica and Other Literary Contraband Bloomsbury 2020 Olster Stacy ed Don DeLillo Mao II Underworld Falling Man Continuum Studies in Contemporary North America Fiction Continuum 2011 Orr Leonard White Noise A Reader s Guide Continuum International Publishing Group 2003 Osteen Mark American Magic and Dread Don DeLillo s Dialogue with Culture University of Pennsylvania Press 2000 Rey Rebecca Staging Don DeLillo Routledge 2016 Ruppersburg Hugh ed Engles Tim ed Critical Essays on Don DeLillo G K Hall 2000 Schneck Peter amp Schweighauser Philipp eds Terrorism Media and the Ethics of Fiction Transatlantic Perspectives on Don Delillo Continuum 2010 Schuster Marc Don DeLillo Jean Baudrillard and the Consumer Conundrum Cambria Press 2008 Shapiro Michael J The politics of fear DeLillo s postmodern burrow In Shapiro Michael J Reading the postmodern polity Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press pp 122 139 1992 Sozalan Azden The American Nightmare Don DeLillo s Falling Man and Cormac McCarthy s The Road Authorhouse Publishing 2011 Taylor Mark C Rewiring the Real In Conversation with William Gaddis Richard Powers Mark Danielewski and Don DeLillo Religion Culture and Public Life Columbia University Press 2013 Trainini Marco Don DeLillo prefazione di Fabio Vittorini Castelvecchi Roma 2016 ISBN 978 88 6944 739 6 Veggian Henry Understanding Don DeLillo University of South Carolina Press 2014 Weinstein Arnold Nobody s Home Speech Self and Place in American Fiction From Hawthorne to DeLillo Oxford University Press 1993 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Don DeLillo nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Don DeLillo Don DeLillo Papers at the Harry Ransom Center DeLillo Featured Authors page at NY Times Literary Encyclopedia Biography Don DeLillo s America website focused on Don DeLillo s work since 1996 Don DeLillo Bibliography listing all work by DeLillo including interviews profiles blurbs and other miscellaneous DeLillo writings Jacobs Timothy Don DeLillo Conspiracy Theories in American History An Encyclopedia Ed Peter Knight Oxford ABC CLIO Press 2003 219 220 Don DeLillo interview with Granta Magazine Bookworm Interviews Audio with Michael Silverblatt January 1998 Archived September 4 2015 at the Wayback Machine June 2003 Archived May 2 2015 at the Wayback Machine June 2003 Archived May 2 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Don DeLillo amp oldid 1194257456, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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