Infinite Jest

by David Foster Wallace
Infinite Jest
published
1996 by Little, Brown
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binding
hardbound, 1079 pages

isbn
0316920004  

description
1st ed





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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 6466)



Cap
05/12/08

Read in May, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Núria
08/14/08

bookshelves: 2008, 5-favoritos, literatura-en-ingles, mios, para-la-isla-desierta, siglo-xx
Read in August, 2008
recommends it for: todo el que opine que la literatura es más grande que la vida
Me he pasado un mes de mi vida leyendo 'La Broma Infinita', un mes en el que prácticamente no he leído nada más, un mes en el que prácticamente no he hecho nada más que leer. No engañaré a nadie, no es un libro fácil, pide mucho de tu parte, pero al final la recompensa es infinita. Es un libro que me va a acompañar siempre. Es uno de aquellos libros que te hacen estar orgullosa de ser lectora. Es uno de aquellos libros que te hacen recordar que no hay nada más grande que la literatura....more
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  4 comments

Andy
10/04/07

bookshelves: read-but-not-recommended
Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in November, 1998
recommends it for: I would not recommend this book.
I actually wrote and posted a review of David Foster Wallace's novel Infinite Jest:

Nearly a decade after publication, David Foster Wallace's novel Infinite Jest remains a literary ink-blot test. With its 1,079 pages (including nearly 400 footnotes), and its fondness for gags, drugs, cultural theory, recent US popular culture, scientific minutiae, and Latinate vocabulary, the novel still divides readers on matters of literary technique and the question of Wallace's literary tale...more
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grantonio
Read in January, 2008
I had mentioned previously that this was one of the best books I've read in recent years. At first, upon finishing this, I plopped it down and mulled my disappointment at the ending. But after settling down and mulling this over a bit, I don't see how I could give this anything but a perfect score.

Where to begin? I won't go to much into the bizarre plot itself, which, although it includes such things as tennis academies, 12-step programs, militant Quebecois separatist wheelchair assassins, a...more
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Marissa
Read in January, 2004
recommended to Marissa by: an ex boyfriend
recommends it for: ?
So i feel this book is like the litmus test of how intellectual and hipster you are. This book is such an undertaking. I took me 6 months to read this book with about a 2 month break somewhere in the middle of that.

What made me interested in this book was a culty group of guys i worked with including, my ex boyfriend. I moved overseas and with basically no friends so Infinite Jest became my constant companion. I would sit in coffee shops during the day before going to my restaurant job...more
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Matt
09/21/08

LOVE IT! The is the best DFW novel extant. I can't wait for the next one. (But I am in fact going to have to wait because DFW hanged himself on 9/12/08, and even though there are rumors of an unfinished book in the wings, I really highly doubt we'll see anything on the matter for quite some time.)

From the book "Elegant Complexity: A Study of David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest," page 20: "In a 1996 radio interview, Wallace said that the structure of the unedited first draft o...more
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Matt
12/05/07

Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in November, 2007
Wow, What an undertaking. It's not so much the sheer size of this novel, but it's Pynchon-esque language and pacing tend to slow one down a bit.
The beginning of the novel (i.e. the first 300 pages) can be somewhat confusing. Wallace introduces characters without really explaining or foreshadowing what their possible roles may be. Also, the novel is set in a sort of "alternate future" and Wallace doesn't explain any of what the references are in this future until the middle of the nov...more
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Shane
04/26/08

recommends it for: people who've read a few big "difficult" books, because this will seem worlds easier by comparison
I'll probably review more in depth later, but this will focus on my initial response to the ending and my thoughts of the book on whole.

I read this in maybe a month or more. For about 95% of the book, I found it a highly enjoyable read, and during most of the book, not a lot SEEMS to be happening, which is the most amazing thing, and it still manages to keep me interested. It's filled with silly/philosophical conversations and scenes that are so vividly painted by the Wallace that you can't...more
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Amy
09/14/08

Read in June, 1997
Postscript: 9.14.08

Sad news -- just read that DFW is no longer with us as of 9.12.08. Apparently he hung himself. It feels like a friend is suddenly gone. Of course, I didn't know him, but reading his work over the years and really liking it and getting all excited to see his name in the "Table of Contents" of a new issue of the New Yorker or Harper's -- it felt like I did know him. I used to fantasize that we would meet and he would fall instantly in love with me upon first sigh...more
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Frank
05/04/08

Read in August, 2000
Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace (1996, Little Brown) is quite the novel. Weighing in at 1079 pages (hardback, including copious footnotes) it is probably the kind of book one either loves or hates. Me, I'm a lover of this amazing book. So much so that I'm typing this review while only on page 714, with still a third of the book in front of my devouring eyes.

I started out just reading a page or two, before bed. Soon I was reading whole chapters at a time. Now I find myself taking breaks f...more
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Alex
09/06/08

I've recommended this novel to many people (even have went so far as to purchase it for someone) and yet, just because of the sheer volume of it, no one has taken the bait. Nonetheless, I think that, without a doubt, this is one of my favorite books I've ever read.

Like Lord of the Rings, you get lost in it: It has everything from verbose depictions of life within a halfway house, the fringe of high school society; hilarious dialogue; a lengthy appendix; French-Canadian wheel-chair ridden as...more
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Emirate
Has a copy to sell/swap — Read in February, 2006
recommends it for: people that like roller coasters with loops/that almost make you throw up
If you read through online reviews of the book, Infinite Jest seems to have divided the fiction reading world largely into two camps: those that are in it (it="the reading of fiction") for the satisfaction that comes from having witnessed an author deftly tie together a narrative; and those that seem to be in it for the simple exposure to moments of humanity and new ideas (regardless of subject matter) (nuggets, if you will).

Normally, I kind of consider myself to straddle this line...more
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Herbie
Read in January, 2008
It's my habit to write on the inside sleeve of a book the words from the text that I can't define or don't understand. Here is the resulting list from the back inside sleeve of Infinite Jest:

apocopes
bolections
reglets
dipsomania
quincunx
varicoceles
simpatico
aleatory
experialist
agnate
pedalferrous
fulvous
louvered
sangfroid
gibbons
apercu
eidetic
murated
tumescent
recidivism
erumpent
rutilant
hale
purled
nacelle
sulcus
imprecated
tumbrel
comportment
scopophob...more
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grant
05/07/07

Read in December, 2005
David Foster Wallace's USA is "A U.S. of modern A. where the State is not a team or a code, but a sort of sloppy intersection of desires and fears, where the only public consensus a boy must surrender to is the acknowledged primacy of straight-line pursuing this flat and short-sighted idea of personal happiness." Shtitt thinks this on page 83.

And this sloppy intersection of desires and fears is pretty clearly one of the main themes of the book.

I think DFW's belief in our perp...more
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Kristin
bookshelves: boxalls-1001-books-you-must-read, time-magazine---all-time-100-novels
Read in August, 2008
This is my first review here on Goodreads but I thought I'd chime in my two cents from this brilliant work by David Foster Wallace.

First of all, if you have a short attention span and/or a stickler for grammar and "normal" forms/plots then this book will not be for you to delve into! It took me a good 2 1/2 weeks to complete and I consider myself a fairly quick reader. When I first started reading this novel some of my friends told me it was similar to Douglas Adams' Hitchhiker's G...more
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Matt
03/21/08

Read in March, 2008
This is a freaking long book. Frustratingly long at points, but it's also something I appreciated about the novel. I can't comprehend the amount of time put into something like this. I really admire and appreciate the effort.

It's kind of a mixed bag sort of book. Neat story, a few memorable characters, laugh out loud funny at certain points. But then there are characters that are, more or less, forgotten about. The introduction to Ken Erdedy, in the first 100 pages or so, is one of the