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Gaddis, William 1922–: Critical Essay by Susan Strehle Klemtner

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About 6 pages (1,660 words)
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While the fictional achievement of William Gaddis is massive, both in importance and in sheer volume, the critical reception of his two novels has been skimpy and uncertain. (p. 61)

The uncertain reception of Gaddis's novels is understandable; the reviews indicate common problems in both for a casual reader: complexity of event and structure, unusual treatment of character, a difficult narrative surface. Gaddis self-consciously anticipates his lack of an audience in both works…. If Gaddis's novels have achieved only a very small audience because of their difficulties, they deserve a much larger one because of their importance. In particular, JR is an extraordinary achievement—richly funny and powerfully accurate; it is more successful in several ways than The Recognitions. (pp. 61-2)

This is a free excerpt of 119 words. There are 1,660 words (approx. 6 pages at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.

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Gaddis, William 1922–: Critical Essay by Susan Strehle Klemtner from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.

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