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D. Harlan Wilson is a professor of English at Wright State University–Lake Campus. He is the author of Cultographies: They Live, Technologized Desire: Selfhood and the Body in Postcapitalist Science Fiction, and over twenty novels and fiction collections.
Locus Recommended Reading List, 2017
"Elegantly argued, intuitively organized, and sure to be relevant
to Ballardian scholars. . . . A testament to Ballard's continued
relevance."--Library Journal "Scholars and fans of Ballard will
find this study comprehensive and stimulating."--Publisher's Weekly
"J. G. Ballard is an engaging and comprehensive study that marshals
a constellation of insights around a single, robust argument. No
scholar writing on Ballard in future will want to be without
it. The book would also serve as an ideal introduction to Ballard
for undergraduates or others coming to his work for the first
time."--The British Society for Literature and Science "Wilson
interweaves the biographical elements with rich and insightful
analysis of Ballard's oeuvre, from the novels to the short stories,
plus commentary on his non-fiction work."--Amazing Stories "A
comprehensive and intelligent overview of the author's work, it is
critically engaged, well-informed in terms of existing scholarship,
and written in a lively and accessible style. This is an excellent
introduction to Ballard's work for scholars new to the author, as
well as for fans and general readers." --Science Fiction Studies
"Energetically written and deeply informed, Wilson's study is a
highly recommended resource for readers needing either a convenient
refresher of Ballard's entire oeuvre or a singular entry point into
Ballard's fascinating life work." --SFRA Review "Wilson has put
together an impressive book. There is something intuitive and
effortless in his assessment of Ballard's work, and around every
corner are
oh-my-goodness-how-could-anyone-have-possibly-missed-that moments
of discovery. For fans and critics alike, this is a must-read."
--American Book Review "A new comprehensive standard. Wilson's
insights reach to the furthest ends of J. G. Ballard's bookshelf,
complicate easy assumptions about the location of the
'autobiographical' in his novels, and, best of all, assert that if
there is a science fiction worth advancing into the twenty-first
century, Ballard is at the center, not the periphery, of that
project."--Jonathan Lethem
"In this wide-ranging and accessible work, D. Harlan Wilson argues
that J. G. Ballard is a writer who remained true to science fiction
even as he claimed to abandon the genre. With clear-eyed
intelligence and a deep understanding of his subject, Wilson builds
a compelling case for Ballard as perhaps SF's most radical
innovator."--Simon Sellars, coeditor of Extreme Metaphors:
Interviews with J. G. Ballard, 1967–2008
"Did J. G. Ballard protest too much? In this engaging work, Wilson
makes a compelling case that, though Ballard often distanced
himself from science fiction, his entire oeuvre belongs to the
genre, even if Ballard fundamentally changed the genre along the
way to include the terrain of inner space and the
science-fictionalization of everyday life. A wonderful reading of
one of late modernity's greatest imaginative writers."--David Ian
Paddy, author of The Empires of J. G. Ballard: An Imagined
Geography
"Both interested and academic readers will appreciate the delicate
balance Wilson achieves between the breadth of his palate and the
depth of each shade, all the while amused by Wilson's snappy prose
and ever-unfolding insights that reveal with appeal in this unique
and compelling study of the Seer of Shepperton. What comes after
highly recommended?"--Rick McGrath, editor of Deep Ends: The J. G.
Ballard Anthology
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