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Barth, John Simmons
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Barth, John Simmons (1930– )

US novelist and short-story writer. He was influential in the ‘academic’ experimental movement of the 1960s. His works, typically encyclopedic in scale, are usually interwoven fictions based on language games, his principal concerns being the nature of narrative and the relationship of language to reality. His novels include The Sot-Weed Factor (1960), Giles Goat-Boy (1966), Chimera (1972), which won the National Book Award, Letters (1979), Sabbatical: A Romance (1982), The Last Voyage of Somebody the Sailor (1991), and Coming Soon!!! (2001).

He also wrote Lost in the Funhouse (1968), a collection of short stories whose title refers to the ironic relation of the author to his own creations.



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This one came not from the pen of John Barth or Philip Roth or David Foster Wallace, nor from one of our era's preening post-ironists, but from Helen Fielding, creator of the wildly popular Bridget Jones phenomenon.
But there is another type of romantic film that reminds me what one of my college professors, John Barth, wrote about love in his National Book Award-winning ``Chimera.
Barbara Krumsiek, CEO & president, The Calvert Group -- John Barth, chairman & CEO, Johnson Controls -- Tim Solso, chairman & CEO, Cummins, Inc.
 
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