Infinite Summer discussion
ready set go!
date
newest »

message 1:
by
[deleted user]
(new)
Jun 21, 2009 06:53AM
Is anyone using a reader's guide? I'm deathly afraid of spoilers. In fact, I'm afraid to look at any of the groups I've joined - here, ravelry, and at infinitesummer.org. I couldn't wait, and am well into the book, about 100 pages. So far, so good.
reply
|
flag

I know I'll read it twice in a row. I have learned to pay close attention, especially if I don't really understand what is meant, or what is happening. Just over 100 pages in, I started over, to stay on schedule. The slow pace might help me read more carefully.

One example: Why do some of the section breaks have a crescent/ring symbol? I went to the DFW Wiki (http://machines.pomona.edu/dfwwiki/in...) and found this under "Annular" - Wallace's numberless disk section breaks are a "joke," pointing to the novel's annularized, narrative No-Time.
Let me make a recommendation to first-time readers in as non-spoilery a fashion as I can. Take note of what the 'conversationalist' says about the Incandenzas on pages 30 and 31. It sounds like a delusional rant, and some of it almost certainly is, but even those parts reveal significant details of what that character believes.

Infinite Zombies -- seven writers yakking about the book -- is going to be a strictly no spoiler zone.
infinitezombies.wordpress.com


The Infinite Jest wiki has been, well, infinitely helpful for me. It goes by page, so you can avoid spoilers very easily.
It sounds like a good plan for this time to just read and enjoy...

Cool, thanks for that reference! I'm just reviewing the info for the pages I've already read and like the sense of, "ooh, yeah, I got that."

It's my first time reading Infinite Jest and this is the approach I'm taking with it too.

Also thought I would mention the WAY the book is being read here in my household: Aloud, in small reading groups. Reading groups of two. The Upstairs Group is my wife and I and the Downstairs Group consists of my two sons (ages 16 and 14--my boys have always been advanced, ambitious readers). Reading the book aloud is a lot of fun if tongue-twisting at times. We can add our own interpretations to the characters, make the respective voices gruff or high-pitched, and of course the next day (we read in the evening) we discuss the twists of what we've read. Upstairs, our goal is 17 pages per day, more or less.
I'm looking forward to tonight's session!
I'd love to here if others have ritualized their Infinite reading.

Can not even imagine getting time together with others to do a read out loud! Would be interesting to do though I am sure.


Enjoy...Marc