An innovative look at the relevance of DeLillo's work to contemporary literature and thought through the lens of "last things," like death, mourning, and the decline of the American empire.
In Apocalyptic Ruin and Everyday Wonder in Don DeLillo's America, Michael Naas artfully delineates the dense web of thematic crosscurrents and connections that run through DeLillo's entire oeuvre. Naas foregrounds the pleasure of reading DeLillo, allowing the humour of the works to be reflected in his own distinctive and accessible writing style. Naas reads DeLillo's fiction as a body of theoretical enquiry in itself rather than applying existing theory and criticism, making this an innovative and necessary addition to scholarship.