When Tom Disch committed suicide on July 4, 2008, we ran this short obituary note by Ken Tucker:
The general public may know his best-known credit: He wrote the novella The Brave Little Toaster, which became the acclaimed 1987 Disney cartoon. But Disch also wrote ten science fiction novels and scores of short stories that placed him at the center of his genre for their uncommon literary adroitness, dry wit and clear-eyed skepticism. Go read the lyrically beautiful On Wings Of Song (1979) immediately, please. He also wrote a unique trilogy of mordant thrillers: The Businessman: A Tale of Terror (1984), The M.D.: A Horror Story (1991), and The Priest: A Gothic Romance (1994).
His primary calling, however, was as a poet. He published a half-dozen collections characterized by a mastery of poetic form, and in 1995 published a collection of essays, The Castle of Indolence: On Poetry, Poets, and Poetasters, that overflowed with glowing appreciation and ruthless criticism of what he considered the best and worst tendencies in modern poetry. I kept it on my bedside table for periodic re-reading and inspiration.
I'll quote just one apercu among many from that collection that all critics would do well to heed: "The larger value of negative criticism—beyond the sigh of relief that 'At last someone has said it'—is that, without it, any expression of delight or enthusiasm is under suspicion of being one more big hug in that special-education classroom where poets minister to each others’ needs for self-esteem."
Others will doubtless comment on the importance of Disch’s poetry in this space; my small request is that you also read the full range of what Disch wrote and fully appreciate his art, craft, and passion. It was the failure of an audience to appreciate the scope of what Disch accomplished that, I'm willing to bet, was one cause of his sad, too-early death.
--Ken Tucker
And, too, his early sci-fi novel "Camp Concentration" is a masterpiece. -- DL
Posted by: The Best American Poetry | November 02, 2019 at 04:43 PM
The 150 short stories are central. It is a sad gap in the record that they are so scattered. A two-vol Disch set from the Library of America -- selected short fiction, collected poems -- would be revelatory...
Posted by: John Clute | November 09, 2019 at 06:46 AM
Thank you, John. It's a great suggestion. If I speak to LOA people I'll relay the idea. I'd love to write an introductory essay. Tom's stories are masterly. And if you'd like to write something about Tom's work for the BAP blog, let us know. -- DL
Posted by: The Best American Poetry | November 09, 2019 at 11:16 AM