Reading the Chunksters discussion

This topic is about
Infinite Jest
Archived 2015 Group Reads
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Infinite Jest, Resources and Links

Very quick summary:
http://shakespeare.about.com/od/hamle...
More in depth analysis:
http://www.sparknotes.com/shakespeare...

http://infinitejest.wallacewiki.com/d...

Spoilers are probably likely if you click on the entries, but you can just zoom around and see all of the locations for fun.
http://infiniteatlas.com/
There's a location in Wernersville, PA, which is about 5 miles from where I live! :) But the place it talks about is marked as "Fictional", and it's not fictional at all. I should probably contact the site about that.

http://sampottsinc.com/ij/
(this is one I am not looking at before reading the book, but will want to come back to later...)

http://infinitejest.wallacewiki.com/d......"
Sooo useful! Especially for Wallace's neologisms!

Ghosts, Murder, and More Murder - Hamlet Part I: Crash Course Literature 203
Ophelia, Gertrude, and Regicide - Hamlet II: Crash Course Literature 204
I enjoy watching his channels

Very quick summary:
http://shakespeare.about.com/od/hamle...
More in depth ana..."
I'll be read Hamlet for the first time, soon.:)

Apparently some people in Germany put on a 24 hour-long stage adaptation of IJ.

I had to take a peek. Found the hamster!

Infinite jest Imaginary Movie Casting Call
It's definitely still in progress, I'll add more characters as we meet them! Let me know if you have any ideas.

What fun, John! (view spoiler)

Infinite jest Imaginary Movie Casting Call
It's definitely still in progress, I'll add more ..."
That's so funny. I loved them! ... except for Kate Gompert - that actress looks like she's playing a cute and stupid little girly, and that isn't how I'd pictured Kate Gompert at all! I'd see her as more brittle, like Emma Watson http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emma_Watson

I think Ellen Page could very well fit. First movie I saw her in was one called "Hard Candy". She was definitely not a girly girl in that movie. :)

You can find a recording of the speech here. I am looking forward to listening to it as soon as I get a chance, because from the commentary I read it seems like DFW touches on some themes that appear in IJ as well.
It looks like there is also a PDF transcript located here.

I've read that commencement speech a couple of times, and listened to part of DFW giving it, and once I started reading IJ I thought the same thing, John. He sure knows how to create depressing, yet at the same time hilarious, scenes that really makes one think.

And beautiful, too!

http://jest.founddrama.net/timeline/


Nope. Not even a little bit. I have 2 notebook pages full of a calendar right now, and I'm on ~page 450.
Bet you can't wait to get started now! :-P

You're so good! I gave up on my journal awhile ago, around page 223. :) Now I'm just going with the flow, enjoying the text, and looking forward to a reread someday.

I haven't decided yet if I like this book enough for a re-read someday, so I am therefore trying to get whatever I can out of it on the first pass! So many books, so little time. I always have so many tbr books that re-reads need to be special.

Very true. I can at least see myself pulling the book off the shelf from time to time and flopping the book open to whichever page to reread bits of it.
I just keep reading how people say a reread of this is a must, so I guess I have figured that in to my life's reading list somehow. But generally I have too many unread books to make any rereading a priority.

Nope. Not even a little bit. I have 2 notebook pa..."
I really can't. I'll be starting Hamlet in a few days, hopefully, then it's off to DFW's masterpiece I go. OMG, I am intimidated!

I haven't decided yet if I like this book enough for a re-read someday, so I am therefore trying to get whatever I can out of it on the firs..."
I hear that a lot of readers can't just leave it be after the 1st read. It becomes an addiction.


I'll be reading the play in a few days.:)

http://infinitesummer.org/archives/215"
Well I found that hilareous. Now I'm really looking forward to starting.
And, yes, I do want to flick forward to page 223...

And, yes, I do want to flick forward to page 223..."
I laugh when I go back and read that list (it seems all a bit silly now...). And I DID laugh when I finally got to page 223 and realized what was there after all the hype. :)

And, yes, I do want to flick forward to page 223..."
I laugh when I go back and read that list (it seems al..."
Now you guys have ME curious about page 223!!

http://www.thehowlingfantods.com/dfw/...

Thank you, Linda!


Oh yes, I watched this - it's great!! Someone had already posted this in a previous thread sometime back, I can't remember which thread now.

Now you guys have ME curious about page 223!!
Don't be :-) It's really an anti climax and actually if you want to read it ahead of time it's not exactly a spoiler.

Hahahahahahahaha!!! The mere thought of this being in order makes me laugh now. I've never read a book that's more diced and sliced (and I've read Catch-22)

I'm definitely re-reading. I just can't decide if I will do it right away or wait for a bit.
I'll probably do it right away though :-)

Now you guys have ME curious about page 223!!
Don't be :-) It's really an anti climax and actually if you want to read it ahead of time it's not exactly a spoiler."
Thank you. I won't be reading ahead, but will be there soon enough. I'm 94 pages into it.:)

Hahahahahahahaha!!! The mere thought of this being..."
Though I am only at 6%, I'm inclined to agree with you. IJ was intended to be read in order, and the craziness of it is quite addictive. If Wallace wanted his audience to read it chronologically, he would have written it as such.
Oh, I hadn't realized that Catch-22 is told in a similar fashion. I really want to read it, now more than ever! Think I'll read it in the coming year. Thank you, Nicola! You've been a great help!

Hahahahahahahaha!!! The mere though..."
There is one difference with Catch-22 chronological wise though - the dates and events in Infinite Jest obviously do lock together correctly, everything is dated (even if the dates are a little whack) but in Catch-22 nothing is dated and you can only really reference where you are by events that are happening around you. This sort of non linear bouncing around leads to one particular reveal that blew my mind; because of the way the plot is structured you don't notice it happening (or I didn't) until it's pointed out to you at the end.
Catch-22 also doesn't match up perfectly I believe. I think someone went through at some point and worked out that the events can't have occurred in the way they are portrayed. But that doesn't matter :-) Keeping everything correctly aligned is definitely not the point of Catch-22...

For sure, the dates in IJ are all out of whack, but can be followed (so far, anyway) by the chapter names. Or can that be misleading?

I don't think so. At least I haven't read anything so far to suggest it (if I'm wrong please don't anyone let me know ahead of time), I think everything does mesh in nicely if you actually took the time to put it all together afterwards. Which I might do for fun :-)

I don't think so. At least I haven't read any..."
That WOULD be fun, albeit a little confusing and time-consuming, IMO, but perhaps that was DFW's intention.
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Authors mentioned in this topic
William Shakespeare (other topics)William Shakespeare (other topics)
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