Tag: Barth, John

John Barth, a Novelist Who Found Possibility in a ‘Used-Up’ Form

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. The maxim “Show, don’t tell” had little purchase with him. In novels, […]

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John Barth, a Novelist Who Found Possibility in a ‘Used-Up’ Form

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. The maxim “Show, don’t tell” had little purchase with him. In novels, […]

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John Barth, Writer Who Pushed Storytelling’s Limits, Dies at 93

John Barth, who, believing that the old literary conventions were exhausted, extended the limits of storytelling with imaginative and intricately woven novels like “The Sot-Weed Factor” and “Giles Goat-Boy,” died on Tuesday. He was 93. His death was confirmed by Rachel Wallach, who works in communications at Johns Hopkins University, where Mr. Barth was an […]

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