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Jan Wildt

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Jan Wildt (1962? - ) is an American author of short stories. Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, he briefly attended Columbia University before working as a stevedore at the Port of San Pedro (California). A 2003 interview with Wildt published in the zine Tungsten contains his only known biographical information.[1] In recent years he has lived at a monastery near San Diego, California. Wildt's scant published output consists entirely of short stories appearing in small-press magazines devoted to literary and/or speculative fiction. Several of the stories use experimental narrative techniques and high-flown as well as pop-vernacular styles to address "the paradox of human desire," making him one of the past decade's prime exponents of the "erratica" movement in speculative fiction. A similar sensibility is found in selected short fiction by David Foster Wallace and George Saunders, among others. His science-fictional musings on personal identity and the sometimes porous boundaries between minds are reminiscent of those of Philip K. Dick. Published stories by Jan Wildt include:

  • Many Dogs, Barking (1998)
  • Like Riding A Bike (1998)
  • A Son of the Revolution (2000)
  • Wonderfreaks (2001)
  • Bink Is Luv (2006)
  • Hate Mate Awaits Fate (2006)
  • The After-Life (2006)
  • Apology (2007)
  • The Laughing Bambino (2007)

References

  1. ^ Sessions, S. Interview: Jan Wildt. Tungsten (Minneapolis MN, USA) 3:4-5, November 2003.

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Jan Wildt from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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