William Gaddis
on the web
)|(
Sites of interest to readers & scholars
-- please send suggestions --

Washington University at Saint Louis Libraries
Washington University Libraries Modern Literature Collection
William Gaddis Papers
Gaddis's carefully assembled and stored archives of manuscripts, notes, and other writings and files, plus his library, have been acquired by Washington University.

The Gaddis-l discussion list
An international group of Gaddis readers, scholars, and fans, discussing various aspects and ramifications of his work, conducting group readings from time to time.

Writers in Conversation interview

William Gaddis interview with Malcolm Bradbury
Writers Talk:  Ideas of our Times
The Roland Collection of Videos & Films on Art
A 32-minute conversation taped in 1986, available for viewing on line or for VHS purchase, on "time and place in the novel, political and cultural climate of contemporary America, the novel as entertainment and moral test, and religion."


Steven Moore and John Kuehl :  1982
Interview with William Gaddis
from The Dalkey Archive Press 
One of Gaddis's rare interviews.

The William Gaddis page at
The Modern Word's 
Scriptorium 

Alas, The Modern Word site is no more, but thanks to archive.org, the Gaddis content is at least partially available. Principally a substantial essay by Tim Conley on the occasion of Gaddis's death, the page is part of the Modern Word's Scriptorium, "one of the major sections of the Libyrinth, an index of author pages detailing writers who have pushed the edges of their medium, combining literary talent with a sense of experimentation to produce some remarkable works of modern literature."  The entire site is worth a thorough browse.

An idiosyncratic reader's site:
William Gaddis
by Alan Westrope, containing notably the complete text of Fire the Bastards!, and a chronology of the Wanda Tinasky-Thomas Pynchon-William Gaddis urban legend, plus a memoir by John Sherry and links to German and French Gaddis sites. Several links are broken, alas.
 

German Gaddis web pages


William Gaddis
New York State Writer
1993-1995
A brief biography with quotations from The Recognitions and J R, and a brief bibliography, in honor of Gaddis's appointment to this position.

Julian Schnabel, Bill Gaddis, 1987, oil, plates and bondo on wood, 48" x 60"

Julian Schnabel
Portrait of Gaddis
a Village friend, illustrating an article on Schnabel's work by Donald Kuspit.  Schnabel also did a series of Recognitions paintings, not yet found on the web.
Please let me know if you find them.

Henry Louis Gates, Jr.
The Passing of Anatole Broyard
a chapter from Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Black Man (New York: Random House, 1997, pp. 180-214) which quotes Gaddis on this Village friend, on whom the character Max in The Recognitions is partially based..

A band from Madison, Wisconsin, U.S.A.
Gaddis
"We sound like a Gaddis book reads."
Two audio clips are available: "Wyatt" and "Clutter," the latter inspired by JR.

The Gaddis Fiction-to-Music Entelechy Transducer
or
Gaddis Ficto-Muse
by Gregg Williard


HyperArts Pynchon Pages

A writer constantly associated with Gaddis,
whether reasonably or not, is
Thomas Pynchon
and this is the latest version of an excellent site about him, with links to guides for
V., Gravity's Rainbow, Mason & Dixon, and the later works, plus much else of interest to Pynchonites.

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The Recognitions || J R || Carpenter's Gothic || A Frolic of his Own || Agapē Agape

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