Steven Moore (author)
Steven Moore is an American author and literary critic. Best known as an authority on the novels of William Gaddis, he is also the author of the two-volume study The Novel: An Alternative History.
Biography/Career
Born outside of Los Angeles, Steven Moore moved to Littleton, Colorado, in 1963, where he attended Arapahoe High School. During this time he played bass guitar in Earthquake Moving Company, the first of many rock bands he would participate in until 1975, often featuring his own compositions.His first literary writings were poems contributed to college literary magazines. In his junior year, he switched majors from history to English, earning both a B.A. and an M.A. from the University of Northern Colorado in Greeley. From 1974 until 1977 he worked as a substitute teacher while writing a novel and the beginnings of a second. From 1974 to 1978 he was also a member of the Colorado Concert Ballet, dancing a variety of minor roles.
Unable to find a full-time teaching position, he began working at ABC Books in Denver in 1976. Two years later he opened his own independent bookstore, Moore Books, which he operated until selling it in 1981. During this time, he published his first works of literary criticism: a series of short notes on James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake in A Wake Newslitter, and book reviews for a Denver arts magazine called Spree. He also wrote his first book, A Readers Guide to William Gaddis's "The Recognitions", published by the University of Nebraska Press in 1982. This was followed by In Recognition of William Gaddis, a collection of essays by various hands, for which he wrote the introduction and contributed an essay. Co-edited with John Kuehl, it was published by Syracuse University Press in 1984. A brief interest in vampire literature led to an anthology Moore edited titled Vampire in Verse, which was published in 1985.
In 1983, Moore returned to college to earn a Ph.D., first at University of Denver, then at Rutgers University in New Jersey, where he graduated in 1988. His dissertation was published the following year as William Gaddis by Twayne Publishers. During these years he continued to write essays for scholarly journals and book reviews for a variety of publications.
Again unable to find a teaching position, in 1988 Moore joined the staff of Dalkey Archive Press, a small press in Illinois that also published The Review of Contemporary Fiction, to which he had contributed in the past. Moore brought two books to Dalkey that elevated it from a little-known publisher to one of the premier literary presses in America: David Markson’s novel Wittgenstein's Mistress and Felipe Alfau’s Locos, which had been published in 1936 but long neglected. Alfau then gave Moore a manuscript written in the 1940s but never published entitled Chromos, which Dalkey published in 1990 to great acclaim. It was a finalist for the National Book Award, and along with Locos was translated into several foreign languages. Moore acquired and edited a number of other writers at Dalkey — Alan Ansen, Rikki Ducornet, Carole Maso, Janice Galloway, Roger Boylan, Alexander Theroux, Susan Daitch, Aurelie Sheehan — and reprinted works by a number of his favorite writers, including Djuna Barnes, Ronald Firbank, Olive Moore, Robert Coover, Paul West, W. M. Spackman, John Barth, William H. Gass, Joseph McElroy, Marguerite Young, and Severo Sarduy. In 1996, Dalkey published Moore's Ronald Firbank: An Annotated Bibliography of Secondary Materials.
Moore was managing editor of the Review of Contemporary Fiction during this same period, to which he contributed many essays and book reviews. An early champion of David Foster Wallace, he solicited Wallace’s first published essay for RCF and suggested he apply for a teaching position at Illinois State University in Normal, Illinois, where Dalkey Archive was located. At Wallace's request, he also read an early draft of Infinite Jest and gave some editorial advice. Beginning in 1990, Moore also started reviewing new fiction for newspapers, principally for the Washington Post, but also for The Nation, Chicago Tribune, and the Los Angeles Times, along with reviews in scholarly journals.
Due to irreconcilable differences with the publisher, Moore resigned from Dalkey in 1996, and continued in the book trade by joining Borders Books and Music later that year. After working at its first Colorado store for four years, he was promoted to book buyer for the entire chain and moved to Ann Arbor, Michigan in 2001. That same year, his edition of Beerspit Night and Cursing: The Correspondence of Charles Bukowski and Sheri Martinelli was published by. Moore was laid off by Borders in January 2010, though he continues to reside in Ann Arbor. Since then, he has supported himself as a freelance indexer for university presses.
In early 2004, Moore began writing a two-volume survey entitled The Novel: An Alternative History, with special attention to innovative works; the first volume appeared in April 2010 from Continuum Books. Reviewing it in the Washington Post, Alberto Manguel wrote, "Moore tells his story with erudition and wit, and in doing so restores to the reader of good fiction confidence in the craft." In the New York Review of Books, Tim Parks disliked its "gung ho tone" but concluded, "Moore's book has the great merit of listing and summarizing scores upon scores of stories" and that "reading these summaries is a pleasure." The second volume, covering the period 1600–1800, was published by Bloomsbury in August 2013, and won the Christian Gauss Award for literary criticism for that year.
Moore is the world's leading authority on the novels of William Gaddis, which he discovered in 1975 and about whom he has written several books and essays. He was the guest speaker at two Gaddis symposia, and assisted with the Chinese translation of Gaddis's J R published in 2008. His edition of The Letters of William Gaddis was published by Dalkey Archive Press in February 2013.
Moore has long championed lengthy, innovative novels: as he told an interviewer, "generally I like 'em big and brainy." Novelist Jonathan Franzen wrote that Moore is a "scholar whose criticism is a model of clarity and intelligent advocacy."
Publications
Books
- A Reader's Guide to William Gaddis's "The Recognitions." University of Nebraska Press, 1982; rev. 1995. .
- William Gaddis. Twayne, 1989. . Expanded edition: Bloomsbury, 2015.
- Ronald Firbank: An Annotated Bibliography of Secondary Materials, 1905–1995. Dalkey Archive Press, 1996.
- The Novel, An Alternative History: Beginnings to 1600. Continuum, 2010.
- The Novel, An Alternative History: 1600–1800. Bloomsbury, 2013. Winner of the Christian Gauss Award for literary criticism.
- . Zerogram Press, 2017. Corrected, expanded edition, 2018.
Anthologies and editions
- In Recognition of William Gaddis . Edited by John R. Kuehl and SM. Syracuse University Press, 1984.
- The Vampire in Verse. Edited by SM. Dracula Press, 1985.
- Edward Dahlberg. Samuel Beckett's Wake and Other Uncollected Prose. Edited with an introduction by SM. Dalkey Archive Press, 1989.
- Ronald Firbank. Complete Short Stories. Edited by SM. Dalkey Archive Press, 1990. Published in England as The Early Firbank. Quartet, 1991.
- Olive Moore. Collected Writings. Edited by SM. Dalkey Archive, 1992.
- Ronald Firbank. Complete Plays. Edited with an introduction by SM. Dalkey Archive 1994.
- W. M. Spackman, Complete Fiction. Edited with an afterword by SM. Dalkey Archive, 1997.
- Beerspit Night and Cursing: The Correspondence of Charles Bukowski and Sheri Martinelli. Edited with an introduction by SM. Black Sparrow, 2001.
- Medieval Epics and Sagas. Edited with a preface by SM. Borders Classics, 2005.
- Chandler Brossard, Over the Rainbow? Hardly: Selected Short Seizures. Edited with an introduction by SM. Sun Dog Press, 2005.
- The Letters of William Gaddis. Edited with an introduction and notes by SM. Dalkey Archive, 2013.
- On the Decay of Criticism: The Complete Essays of W. M. Spackman. Edited with an introduction by SM. Fantagraphics Books, 2017.
Articles, notes, and contributions to books
- "David in Crimea." A Wake Newslitter: Studies of James Joyce's "Finnegans Wake." 13 : 115–16.
- "For the Record." AWN 13 : 118.
- "Oliver Cromwell." AWN 14 : 29–30.
- "Luperca Latouche." AWN 17 : 25.
- "I Ching." AWN 17 : 25.
- "Chronological Difficulties in the Novels of William Gaddis." Critique 22 : 79–91.
- "An Interview with William Gaddis." Review of Contemporary Fiction 2.2 : 4–6.
- "William Gaddis: A Selected Bibliography." RCF 2.2 : 55–56.
- "Pynchon on Record." Pynchon Notes 10 : 56–57.
- "Subject Index." AWN, special supplement : I-vi.
- "‘Parallel, Not Series': Thomas Pynchon and William Gaddis." Pynchon Notes 11 : 6–26.
- "Additional Sources for Gaddis's The Recognitions." American Notes & Queries 22 : 111–15.
- "‘The World Is at Fault.'" Pynchon Notes 15 : 84–85.
- "Alexander Theroux's Darconville's Cat and the Tradition of Learned Wit." Contemporary Literature 27 : 233–45.
- "An Interview with Chandler Brossard." RCF 7.1 : 38–53.
- "Chandler Brossard: An Introduction and Checklist." RCF 7.1 : 58–86.
- "William Gaddis: Sidelights Essay." Contemporary Authors, New Revision Series. Edited by Deborah A. Straub. Gale Research Co., 1987. 21:148–53.
- "Gaddis's J R." The Explicator 47.1 : 55.
- "Introduction." Alan Ansen, Contact Highs: Selected Poems 1957–1987. Dalkey Archive, 1989. xi–xxxiv.
- "Joseph McElroy: A Bibliography." RCF 10.1 : 283–88.
- "David Markson and the Art of Allusion." RCF 10.2 : 164–78.
- "William Gaddis: la fascination du labyrinthe." Magazine littéraire, October 1990, 95–97.
- "Alexander Theroux: An Introduction." RCF 11.1 : 7–28.
- "An Interview with Alexander Theroux." RCF 11.1 : 29–35.
- "Alexander Theroux: A Bibliography." RCF 11.1 : 133–39.
- "Afterword." Djuna Barnes, Ladies Almanack. Dalkey Archive, 1992. 87–91.
- "Fin de Siècle." American Notes & Queries 5.4 : 223-24. Rpt. in Surfing Tomorrow: Essays on the Future of American Fiction. Ed. Lance Olsen. Prairie Village, KS: Potpourri, 1995. 69-70.
- "Recalled to Life." RCF 13.1 : 245–47.
- "Brigid Brophy: An Introduction and Checklist." RCF 15.3 : 7–11.
- "Foreword." The Letters of Wanda Tinasky. Edited by T. R. Factor. Vers Libre Press, 1996. ix–xi.
- "A New Language for Desire: Aureole. " RCF 17.3 : 206–14.
- "Reveries of Desire: An Interview with Rikki Ducornet." Bloomsbury Review, January/February 1998, 11–12. Rpt. in The VP Annual 2016, 81-89.
- "Sheri Martinelli: A Remembrance." Anais 16 : 92–102.
- "Sheri Martinelli: A Modernist Muse." Gargoyle 41 : 29–54.
- "Foreword." Chandler Brossard. Who Walk in Darkness. Herodias, 2000.
- "Fairies and Nymphs: The Fiction of Francesca Lia Block." Rain Taxi 5.4 : 32–33.
- "Foreword." Chandler Brossard. The Bold Saboteurs. Herodias, 2001.
- "Nympholepsy." Gargoyle 45 : 9–22.
- Untitled contribution to "William Gaddis: A Portfolio." Conjunctions 41 : 387.
- "Carpenter's Gothic; or, The Ambiguities." in William Gaddis: Bloom's Modern Critical Views. Ed. Harold Bloom. Philadelphia: Chelsea House, 2004. 101–24.
- “Paper Flowers: Richard Brautigan's Poetry.” In Richard Brautigan: Essays on the Writings and Life. Ed. John F. Barber. Jefferson, NC : McFarland & Co., 2006. 188–204. Translated into French as the introduction to Brautigan’s Tout ce que j'ai à déclarer: œuvre poétique complète, 25-51.
- “The Secret History of Agape Agape.” In Paper Empire: William Gaddis and the World System. Ed. Joseph Tabbi and Rone Shavers. Tuscaloosa : Univ. of Alabama Press, 2007. 256–66.
- "David Foster Wallace In Memoriam." Modernism/Modernity 16.1 : 1–3.
- "William Gaddis: The Nobility of Failure." Critique 51 : 118–20.
- "When Knighthood Was in Error." College Hill Review no. 5 : http://www.collegehillreview.com/005/0050901.html
- "Foreword." Ted Morrissey. The Beowulf Poet and His Real Monsters. Edwin Mellin Press, 2013. i–iv.
- "The Pleasures of The Sorrows of Young Werther." Apology, #2 : 112–19.
- "Alexander Theroux—Darconville’s Cat." The Syllabus. Ed. G. N. Forester and M. J. Nicholls. Singapore: Verbivoracious Press, 2015, 107–8.
- "Maximalism Down Argentine Way: Adam Buenosayres." Pleasure: A Journal of the Arts no. 4 : 15-19.
- "Publishing Rikki." Rikki Ducornet. Ed. G. N. Forester and M. J. Nicholls. Singapore: Verbivoracious Press, 2015, 63-67.
- “The Avant-Pop Novels of J. P. McEvoy.” Número Cinq 8.3 :
- “What Is Literature?” 3:AM Magazine, posted 6 January 2020:
- “M. J. Nicholls: Fear Anxiety Panic.” Rain Taxi 25.1 : 16-18.