Everything and More

by David Foster Wallace
Everything and More  
published 2005 by Phoenix Press
binding Paperback
isbn 0753818825   (isbn13: 9780753818824)
pages 368
description Before discussing the merits of David Foster Wallace's Everything and More: A Compact History of Infinity, it is essential to define what the b...more
date added
02-07-07



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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 439)



Justin
Justin rated it: 4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars4 of 5 stars
04/15/07

Read in April, 2007
recommends it for: Wallace Fans/Math Nerds/Infinity Nerds
The reason this book works so well is that Wallace writes about the history of grappling with possibly the most slippery and forbidding concept (infinity) in a very conversant tone. While at times, I did feel like he went overboard a bit so that it went from "conversant" to "patronizing," I generally like DF Wallace a lot and appreciated what he was trying to do with this book (i.e. write a book that "anyone can read" about a "very complicated subject").
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Jarrodtrainque
Before discussing the merits of David Foster Wallace's Everything and More: A Compact History of Infinity, it is essential to define what the book is not. This volume in the "Great Discoveries" series is not a history of the personalities and social conditions that led to the "discovery" of infinity. Nor is it a narrative fixated on the cultish fear of--and obsession with--the infinite that has seemingly driven mathematicians insane over the centuries. Rather, Everything and ...more
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David
07/23/07

bookshelves: mind-numbingly-boring
Love him or hate him, DFW is a prodigious talent. Except for the disturbing "Conversations with Hideous Men" I have found his previous material to be so hilariously, intelligently, on-target that I was willing to overlook a multitude of stylistic transgressions (chiefly, the overly cutesy tone, gratuitous flaunting of the author's erudition, the footnote fetish).

So I was reasonably disposed to like this book and was looking forward to reading it. Sadly, it turns out that this was ...more
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Stephen
Read in February, 2008
This starts off pretty lucid and fascinating--a real page turner--with some cool paradoxes (such as, if you cross a street, first you have to cross half a street, but before you can cross half you have to cross half of that and before you can cross half of that... and so on... so how could you ever cross the street when there are an infinite number of halves you have to cross first?), interesting history, and mind-blowing concepts (a line contains an infinite number of points, no matter how long...more
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Anna
Anna is currently reading it (review of isbn 0393003388)
06/09/07

bookshelves: currently-reading, mathematics
Read in June, 2007
recommends it for: anyone who finds math interesting
I'm still reading this book, but what I find most interesting thus far is DFW's use of abbreviations and symbols as a part of his writing--for example, using the lemniscate instead of writing the word "infinity". It has the effect of making the reader aware of concepts that essentially exist beyond language (in this particular occasion) and in others, makes one aware of how highly developed and ingrained linguistic sign patterns are that we can use either symbols, acrostics or initial...more
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Mame
02/10/08

Read in January, 2007
This is pop mathematics with wit and charm second only to E. T. Bell.

Infinity is a tricky subject---it is so easy to dramatize without saying anything substantive. But, thankfully, DFW is straightforward with the math. He does ham up the drama a fair bit, which made the book feel kind of tired. I am going to blame my boredom with the book on the fact that I read more history and philosophy of math than any girl should. OTOH, since I love history/philosophy of math so much, I can't help but r...more
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erock
erock rated it: 3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars
03/02/07

Read in December, 2004
recommends it for: people with beards
What?
Huh?
Yeesh, what happened?

Infinity got the best of me...this time.

If this book taught me anything it is that Infinity is bigger than me.
In fact, it made brain shrivel a little.
When it comes to math, I'll admit, I'm a bit of a slouch. When it came to reading this book, I'll also admit I was a bit of a slouch.
Interesting, to say the least, this whole Infinity thing.
But, at the end of the day, I like my like my liquor neat and my coca-cola warm and my numbers f...more
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Paul
07/01/07

For thousands of years, people smarter than me have struggled with the ideas of "infinitely big" and "infinitely small". This book chronicles their the history of their ordeals.

I find DFW's footnote-heavy in-jokey style mildly to heavily irritating, but I was willing to tolerate it because of his obvious excitement. I used to think of analysis as pointless pedantry, but DFW convinced me otherwise -- high praise!
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Jim
12/31/07

Read in December, 2007
i really like david foster wallace. and by like, i mean something along the lines of - i seek out his words like a junkie seeks out smack. here, he takes on a massively complex subject of which i know nothing (and have always been curious) and renders it lucidly.

i didn't dig into the hardcore math to the extent i could have, but wallace managed to generate understanding on multiple levels.
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Erik
12/09/07

Yes, I enjoyed it, which is weird. I'm not a fan of Wallace's or other "super intellectual" fiction and I know there are MUCH better books on infinity and set theory by mathematicians and philosophers. So why did I dig this? It's like looking a weird animal like the platypus, an amalgam of different parts. I never saw that before. The fact that he could carry this off at all impresses me.
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Betsy
The reviews had said this book was in layman's terms. Ha! About halfway through I pulled out my college calculus book, hoping to remember enough of the subject to finish reading Wallace's book. Couldn't understand enough to finish it, though it had some stimulating ideas about infinity in the early going.
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Lisa
02/07/08

I thought he did a very impressive job, considering what the subject was and the range of people he wanted the book to be accessible to. It was interesting but still pretty easy to follow. Sometimes he did sound a little bit patronizing, but not so much that it was annoying to read.
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Travis
05/05/08

Although the book has DFW's trademark humor and style, it's written more for a math audience. And I'm not really a math person (I use the basics for everyday stuff, but nothing too fancy), so I could not get into it. But those interested in mathematics and physics should like it.
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Sarah
Sarah is currently reading it (review of isbn 0393003388)
06/13/07

bookshelves: currently-reading
Read in January, 2007
this book is for the reader who likes to pretend they understand pythagorem's theorum and for those who don't mind a little footnote indulgence. Due to the use of many abbreviations, the book is linguistically current - like an epic text message on mathematical theories.
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John
02/22/08

Not DFW's best but I enjoyed his way of describing thigs. The mathematics does not make this a book worth reading, but his unique way of phrasing, paraphasing and describing mathematics makes this a must read for people wanting to describe math in a meaningful way.
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Raylene
Read in January, 2008
recommends it for: math nerds,people with time
His trademark footnotes and super footnotes work well with sorting the hierarchy of mathy historical material, but apparently I'm only interested in 100 pages of the history of infinity and not more. Perhaps it waxes more lyrical and less historical later on.

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cory
02/07/08

recommends it for: obsessive compulsive people
uh-oh! a guy who writes an infinitiloquent tome now takes on a book about infinity. how many words can one waste on a topic that the more you divide it up, the further from the core of the idea you remain? about 320 pages worth of words is the answer there.
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Curtis
02/15/08

Read in January, 2004
an enjoyable read, but ultimately flawed, in that he gets some of the math wrong, especially at the end. Guess all of those years of Tennis in the midwest didn't prepare him for this as much as he thought.
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Britt
01/21/08

DFW's peripatetic conversation style really slows down a mathematical history. or maybe I'm an idiot and this isn't a mathematical history but a chance for DFW to meditate on mathematics.
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Sarah
08/01/07

bookshelves: non-fiction
Read in January, 2005
Totally blew my mind. Wallace explains in math-you-can-understand how it is that some infinite sets are BIGGER and have MORE NUMBERS in them than other infinite sets.
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book data (includes all editions)

avg rating (all editions): 3.39 (300 ratings)
avg rating (this edition): 3.25 (36 ratings)
number of reviews: 37






other editions

Everything and More: A Compact History of Infinity (Great Discoveries)
Everything and More: A Compact History of Infinity (Great Discoveries)
Everything and More (Paperback)