
WALLACE, David Foster [Steve Snider].
Infinite Jest: A Novel.
Boston: Little, Brown and Company , 1996.
We're sorry, this item has sold.
+$500
"The Truth Will Set You Free. But Not Until It Is Finished With You": First Edition Of The Authors Magnum Opus Infinite Jest; Signed by David Foster Wallace and Twice by Jacket Designer Steve Snider
First edition of the author's magnum opus. Thick octavo, original half cloth. Boldly signed by David Foster Wallace with his added smiley face on the front free endpaper. Additionally signed twice by jacket designer Steve Snider: on the jacket front panel and on the rear panel flap. Steve Snider, a graduate of the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and a designer whose fifty-year career encompassed the art directorships of The Atlantic, Little, Brown and Company, and St. Martin's Press, produced one of the most recognizable typographic jacket designs in the history of American publishing when he created the cover for David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest. Reasoning that the novel at over 1,000 pages and two and three-eighths inches thick required a jacket that announced its importance with grand and approachable typography rather than specific imagery, Snider focused on the word "infinite" and deployed what he and editor Michael Pietsch described as "the Big Book look," presenting a single design that Pietsch approved immediately and that the sales force loved without reservation. The author was a conspicuous exception to the general enthusiasm. Wallace's six-word response upon receiving the jacket was: "Got the jacket. Wow. Pretty sky." And when he signed Snider's personal copy of the novel, he inscribed it "For Steve Snyder — with many thanks," misspelling the designer's name with a Y rather than an I, a small but pointed error that Snider has noted with characteristic wit, wondering in retrospect whether it reflected a genuine oversight or a quietly deliberate expression of the author's displeasure. The anecdote has since become one of the more celebrated and bittersweet footnotes in the history of a book that Chad Harbach declared in 2004 now looks like the central American novel of the past thirty years, a dense star for lesser work to orbit. Very good in a very good first state dust jacket with Vollmann misspelled on the back panel. Damp staining to the final 130 pages and soiling to the jacket. Jacket design by Steve Snider.
In 2004, Chad Harbach declared that, in retrospect, Infinite Jest "now looks like the central American novel of the past thirty years, a dense star for lesser work to orbit." In a 2008 retrospective by The New York Times, Infinite Jest was described as "a masterpiece thats also a monster nearly 1,100 pages of mind-blowing inventiveness and disarming sweetness. Its size and complexity make it forbidding and esoteric." Time Magazine included the novel in its list of the 100 best English-language novels published since 1923.
Infinite Jest: A Novel.
Out of Stock
