David Shields
David Shields is an American author, essayist, filmmaker, and professor of English at the University of Washington, recognized for pioneering experimental nonfiction that employs collage, sampling, and hybrid structures to foreground empirical reality and personal experience over fabricated narratives.[1][2]
His breakthrough work, Reality Hunger: A Manifesto (2010), assembles aphoristic fragments from diverse sources to challenge the primacy of the novel, advocating instead for appropriated, reality-driven forms that resist tidy storytelling in favor of raw, associative truth.[2][1]
Shields has produced over two dozen books, including The Thing About Life Is That One Day You'll Be Dead (2008), a meditation on aging and mortality blending memoir and science, and Salinger (2013), a collaborative biography of J.D. Salinger that earned a Goodreads Choice Award finalist nod.[1][2]
Among his accolades are a Guggenheim Fellowship, two National Endowment for the Arts fellowships, and the PEN/Revson Award for Remote: Reflections on Life in the Shadow of Celebrity (1996).[1][2]
Shields's insistence on dismantling literary conventions—dismissing much fiction as escapist and endorsing ethical sampling despite copyright concerns—has sparked debate, positioning him as a polarizing figure who prioritizes causal immediacy and verifiable fragments over polished illusion.[3][4]