UHV dean releases book on innovative, influential late author
The dean of the University of Houston-Victoria School of Arts & Sciences recently published a book of essays about novelist Raymond Federman, his life as a Holocaust survivor and his influence as an experimental writer.
Jeffrey Di Leo�s seventh book, �Federman�s Fictions: Innovation, Theory, and the Holocaust,� was a labor of love to document the writer who passed away in 2009 at age 81. Di Leo authored the introduction and edited contributions from 19 other writers, including Federman himself.
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�Its publication is bittersweet without Ray around to share it with,� Di Leo said. �He was a distinguished writer, an American Book Review speaker and a dear friend.�
Di Leo said the book was in the planning stages during Federman�s April 2007 visit to speak at the American Book Review Reading Series. Di Leo is publisher and editor of the American Book Review literary journal housed at UHV.
�I first became interested in Federman�s work when I was in graduate school, and he was one of the postmodern writers we studied,� Di Leo said. �The crossover appeal to his work was very appealing to me. You just don�t find many writers with that rich of a range.�
The UHV professor of English and philosophy said he met Federman in person in 2002 when the French-born author came to Chicago to speak to a class Di Leo led at the University of Illinois-Chicago.
�I spent a couple of days with him, and it was at that time I noticed there wasn�t a book that dealt with the full body of his work and could speak to its critical range,� Di Leo said.
Federman�s life story is one worth chronicling. His adolescence began with a shock in 1942, when, at age 14, he was hidden in a small closet as Germans entered his family�s home and took his parents and sisters. His family died at Auschwitz within a year.
But the future writer traveled the world, coming to America to study literature, write and work with avant-garde writer Samuel Beckett, all the while developing his unique, experimental style. He eschewed offers from major publishing houses, preferring to practice his art outside of market-driven forces.
Di Leo said the latter left his work revered in higher-education English departments but largely absent from the public square.
�I hope this collection of essays will help increase understanding and appreciation of his work,� Di Leo said. �The book adds other voices to the conversation about his work � voices from philosophy, critical theory, translation study, comparative literature, linguistics and history � voices that have never been brought together in one volume.�
The book, released this week, was published by the State University of New York Press. It will be the subject of a panel discussion in January at the Modern Language Association conference in Los Angeles.
Don Smith, UHV interim president, said Di Leo�s book demonstrates that the American Book Review and its reputation for serious literary study are in good hands through the dean�s guidance.
�Dr. Di Leo�s continuing research and contribution to scholarly study enriches the quality of teaching at UHV and, indeed, throughout the profession,� Smith said. �His leadership in this area is inspirational.�
