Criticism > Short Story Criticism > Barthelme, Donald - Charles Baxter (essay date autumn 1990)
Barthelme, Donald - Charles Baxter (essay date autumn 1990)
Charles Baxter (essay date autumn 1990)
SOURCE: Baxter, Charles. “The Donald Barthelme Blues.” Gettysburg Review 3, no. 4 (autumn 1990): 713-23.
[In the following essay, Baxter traces Barthelme's literary development, focusing on his utilization of characters and language.]
The same day that a friend called with the news that Donald Barthelme had died, a freight train derailed outside Freeland, Michigan. Among the cars that went off the tracks were several chemical tankers, some of which spilled and caught fire. Dow Chemical was (and still is) reluctant to name these chemicals, but one of them was identified as chlorosilene. When chlorosilene catches fire, as it did in this case, it turns into hydrochloric acid. Upon being asked about the physical hazards to neighbors and on-lookers near the fire, a company representative, interviewed on Michigan Public Radio, said, “Well, there's been some physical reactions, yes, certainly....
[The entire page is 5468 words long]
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Criticism
- Morris Dickstein (essay date 1977)
- Paul Bruss (essay date 1981)
- Lois Gordon (essay date 1981)
- Frank Burch Brown (review date 31 March 1982)
- Maurice Couturier and Regis Durand (essay date 1982)
- Larry McCaffery (essay date 1982)
- Charles Molesworth (essay date 1982)
- Wayne B. Stengel (essay date 1985)
- John Domini (essay date winter 1990)
- Charles Baxter (essay date autumn 1990)
- Ewing Campbell (essay date fall 1990)
- Stanley Trachtenberg (essay date 1990)
- Brian McHale and Moshe Ron (essay date summer 1991)
- Jerome Klinkowitz (essay date 1991)
- Barbara L. Roe (essay date 1992)
- Wayne B. Stengel (essay date 1992)
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