Nobody likes the comic who explains his own material, but the writer John Barth, who died on Tuesday, had a way of making explanations — of gags, of stories, of the whole creative enterprise — sing louder and funnier and truer than punchlines.
For many years, starting in the 1960s, he was at the vanguard of this movement, alongside writers like Thomas Pynchon and William Gaddis.
He declared that all paths for the novel had already been taken, and then blazed new ones for generations of awe-struck followers.
He showed us how writing works by letting us peer into its machinery, and reminded us that our experience of the world will always be dictated by the instruments we have to observe and record it.
While never abandoning narrative, he found endless joy in picking apart its elements, and in the process helped define a postwar American style.
Persons:
John Barth, ”, Barth, —, Thomas Pynchon, William Gaddis
Locations:
American