John Barth, novelist who orchestrated literary fantasies, dies at 93
His comic novels and metafictional stories made him a giant of postmodernism
By Harrison Smith
April 2, 2024 at 9:53 p.m. EDT

Novelist John Barth. (Corbis via Getty Images) (Peter Jones/Corbis via Getty Images)
John Barth, a novelist who crafted labyrinthine, fantastical tales that were at once bawdy and philosophical, placing him on the cutting edge of the postmodern literary movement, died April 2. He was 93. ... His death was announced in
a statement by Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, where he was a longtime faculty member. The statement did not say where or how he died.
Mr. Barth was the author of about 20 books, among them the short-story collection Lost in the Funhouse (1968), a landmark of experimental fiction, and the comic novels The Sot-Weed Factor (1960) and Giles Goat-Boy (1966).
The former was included on Time magazines
2010 list of the 100 greatest English-language novels, and in 1973 Mr. Barth won a National Book Award for Chimera, a collection of three interrelated novellas that retold the mythical stories of Perseus, Bellerophon and Scheherazade. (Mr. Barth, not for the last time, appeared as a character in the work, making a cameo as a smiling genie who offers Scheherazade, or Sherry, fresh material for the stories she tells each night.)
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Despite such acclaim, Mr. Barths books were sometimes criticized by peers as academic, pretentious and willfully obtuse. Where novelist
John Updike offered praise, favorably
comparing the marital dramas of Chimera to his own work about domestic discontent, writer
Gore Vidal offered a scathing assessment: Mr. Barths books,
he said, were written to be taught, not to be read.
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By Harrison Smith
Harrison Smith is a reporter on The Washington Post's obituaries desk. Since joining the obituaries section in 2015, he has profiled big-game hunters, fallen dictators and Olympic champions. He sometimes covers the living as well, and previously co-founded the South Side Weekly, a community newspaper in Chicago. Twitter
https://twitter.com/harrisondsmith