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Original Title: Infinite Jest
ISBN: 0316921173 (ISBN13: 9780316921176)
Edition Language: English
Characters: Hal Incadenza, Joelle Van Dyne, Michael Pemulis, Mario Incandenza, Ken Erdedy, Avril Incandenza, Orin Incandenza, Randy Lenz, Ortho Stice, Tiny Ewell, Poor Tony Krause, Clenette Henderson, Remy Marathe, Hugh Steeply, Pat Montesian, Ann Kittenplan, Trevor Axford, LaMont Chu, Geoffrey Day, Gerhardt Schtitt, Ted Schacht, Dr. James Orin Incandenza, Katherine Ann Gompert, Dr. Charles Tavis, Mildred L. Bonk, Harriet Bonk-Green, Jim Troelsch, Donald W. Gately, Bruce Green, Emil Minty, Lyle
Setting: Massachusetts(United States) Enfield Tennis Academy Ennet House …more Tucson, Arizona(United States) Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)(United States) …less
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Infinite Jest Paperback | Pages: 1088 pages
Rating: 4.29 | 70348 Users | 8398 Reviews

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Title:Infinite Jest
Author:David Foster Wallace
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:First Edition
Pages:Pages: 1088 pages
Published:2005 by Back Bay Books (first published February 1st 1996)
Categories:Philosophy. Religion. Islam

Narration In Pursuance Of Books Infinite Jest

A gargantuan, mind-altering comedy about the Pursuit of Happiness in America.

Set in an addicts' halfway house and a tennis academy, and featuring the most endearingly screwed-up family to come along in recent fiction, Infinite Jest explores essential questions about what entertainment is and why it has come to so dominate our lives; about how our desire for entertainment affects our need to connect with other people; and about what the pleasures we choose say about who we are.

Equal parts philosophical quest and screwball comedy, Infinite Jest bends every rule of fiction without sacrificing for a moment its own entertainment value. It is an exuberant, uniquely American exploration of the passions that make us human—and one of those rare books that renew the idea of what a novel can do.

Rating Epithetical Books Infinite Jest
Ratings: 4.29 From 70348 Users | 8398 Reviews

Article Epithetical Books Infinite Jest
Allegedly DFW's first choice for the book's original cover... Around halfway through endnote 90 (which itself is 4 pages long) Don Gately says: "It makes me feel good you think I'm decent to talk to. That's supposed to be why I'm here. I sure needed to talk, at the start. Can you remember where you were headed before I broke i interrupted?" (1001)This is arguably what passes for a joke in Infinite Jest. See, Gately is a reformed thief who used to burglarize houses to support his drug habit.

DJ Ian's Sunday Evening "Tell Me What You Really Think"You're listening to Radio KCRCR, "Tell Me What You Really Think", where we listen to the critics and you talk back. That's if there's any time left after I finish my rant. Hehe.A lot of listeners ask me about my namesake. What about that other Ian Graye, you say. The one on GoodReads. What do you think of him? And what did you think of his recent review of David Foster Wallace's magnum opus?Well, let me reassure you: that other Ian Graye is

I've been waiting, panther-like, for the right combination of caffeine and personal gumption to strike, to attack writing about this, since it really is one of my favorite books ever-ever, and one of the most fascinating things I've ever read. I've read this book twice and I could care less what people say about it, because when I *do* care, I tend to grit my teeth over the ridiculous comments & reviews that tend to come up in discussing David Foster Wallace's work. People like to levy the

I have written a more substantial but no more real review than the little blurb that used to sit here. The original blurb written on the day I heard DFW died follows this lengthy and self-indulgent exercise.Within a year of each other two works of entertainment were released that have been pretty darn influential to me. One is this book, and the other was Jawbreaker's album Dear You. Both are relatively polarizing works, people either seem to love it or hate it*. Jawbreaker's album was a



Mulholland Drive (M.D.) is the movie that made me a David Lynch fan. Infinite Jest (I.J.) is the book that has made me a DFW fan. I mention this because the first time I saw M.D., I immediately rewatched it. Likewise for I.J. - as soon as I finished it, I flipped to the beginning and started again. This is a book so fractured in structure that it needs serious re-examination and puzzling over. M.D. and I.J. break up the story rather than direct telling, dropping clues and hints along the way.

It's now been more than two years since I began Infinite Jest and about 10 months since I finished it. In all that time, the scene that has stuck with me the most is one where a character, attempting to go to a 12-step meeting for a drug addiction, goes astray and ends up at what is actually a "men's movement" meeting. A relic of the 1990s, the men's movement was a chance for men to get together and show their sensitive sides to one another, or allow their inner warriors or their inner children

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