Published last month, Bound to Last is a new anthology for which thirty authors pay homage to their “most cherished books.” There are some excellent and in some cases deeply inspired entries: Ed Park geeks out over the Dungeon Masters Guide; Nick Flynn assembles a series of personal, melancholic fragments about Ryszard Kapuscinski’s Shadow of the Sun. But the most personal essay is by artist Karen Green, the widow of David Foster Wallace. Her topic is The Collected Stories of Amy Hempel, but the essay basically uses quotes from that book as a framework for her reflections about DFW’s suicide—about selling the house that they shared, about describing what had happened in the house, about talking to her late husband’s psychiatrist. “I was asked to contribute to this anthology because I am the widow, via hanging, of David Foster Wallace,” she writes, “whose writing I enjoyed very much, but whose made-up potty humor songs on a road trip I liked even better.” Green’s humor is on a par with Hempel’s: Her description of the gift shop at the L. A. Coroner’s Office is both skewed and also, somehow, respectful of life. The piece is the most moving thing we’ve read about Wallace’s death yet.