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# Infinite Jest

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Review: A working vacation - INFINTE JEST. (1996) David Foster Wallace. Everything you have heard, read, and that has been said about Infinite Jest is true. Should YOU read it? Is the only relevant question. This book is work--it's going into the gym and the classroom. (It is 1079 pages and holding it requires strength and strategy. And Kindle, iPod, or cd isn't a remedy because of the classroom aspect--you will want to highlight, and write in the margins; and it requires two bookmarks--one for the body and one for the endnotes.) This book, though a novel, is a journey into the mind of David Foster Wallace and is one long suicide (Wallace hung himself 12 years after publication at age 46) note. But it is not grim and dour. It is, at times, gruesome and frightening, yes, and also funny, and always insightful into the human condition and especially the American pursuit of happiness and pleasure along with the concurrent escape from discomfort and pain. And mostly about the inherent and ironic conflict between pleasure and pain--how the relief of pain into pleasure ultimately creates more pain, which causes one to seek more relief/pleasure, i.e. a psychological and physiological trap--a cage with no way out ... except maybe through a Twelve-step program which is SO boring so as to be not worth the effort. And then, there is reincarnation--which DFW never calls by name (something he does with the Psychoanalytic Reaction Formation, also) but which plays a huge part in the story. Both. Should YOU read it? I rank it as one of the four best books of all time. I lived with it for three weeks pretty much not doing anything else but reading and thinking about what Wallace was saying. I stopped drinking (One theme is addiction) and didn't bother to go out or watch any entertainment or do any work of my own (writing). It, the book, moved into my mind--took up residence in my apartment, became my roommate. Of course that is ironic also because the book's first name was "A FAILED ENTERTAINMENT," and the book is the most entertaining thing I've ever experienced - passively; but then it is work so it's not completely passive, as say watching something - "spectation" Wallace calls it. What the book is is inside the brain of a particular personality who happens to be a genius with a photographic memory (which again he doesn't name but describes: "Hal [a central character] can summon a kind of mental Xerox of anything he'd ever read and basically read it all over again, at will, ... ." (Pg. 797) I think parts of Wallace surface in all of the characters (there are scores of them) and what he does is to debate through interior and exterior dialogue, btw & w/in characters. Ideas/thoughts/philosophy (and of course this is discussed. He also critiques his own writing style via this, his technique,) Wallace's personality is, if categorized by the trait theory of The Big Five (OCEAN) [I think]: Extremely high O (open) slightly less but still very high C (conscientiousness), somewhat low E (extraversion, i.e Introverted), somewhat low A (agreeableness) and somewhat above average N (neuroticism). Add to that an extremely high I.Q. with that memory thing, a large physical presence (6'2, 200lbs.) and a cute and interesting face and you've got the man. If you think you can relate to those characteristics--you'll probably be taken by, and drawn into the novel as I was. [About being high O. Highly Open persons tend to be bored by people below them on the continuum, which looks like arrogance, elitism, snobbery, creative showoffishness, etc. Openness is the trait most associated with creativity. They also tend to be low in A (a `pussified' trait) for obvious reasons.] That by way of introduction. Briefly now, a look at Infinite Jest by way of the six elements of a story. Title: Perfect, either one. Defines the book. Plot: There is only a very almost inconsequential one. It is sometimes a distraction. It is about the relationship btwn the USA and Canada and the use and disposal/reuse of energy and territory. In an interesting way - it is woven into the pleasure/pain conundrum and so therefore worth some consideration. The personal and political intersect with, I think, some very bizarre drug enhanced imaginative thoughts and ideas. Free association. Characterization: There are three main protagonists. Hal Incandenza, a 17 yr.old, privileged white boy, at an elite youth tennis academy in Massachusetts; founded by his father (alcoholic) and run by his mother (OCD). Hal is addicted to marijuana and nicotine and a gifted and highly rated tennis prospect. He has younger residents/students/players he mentors, as well as two brothers who play prominent roles. Don Gately, a 29 yr. old, staff resident of a halfway house for recovering substance abusers, located adjacent to the tennis academy. Don is 9 months sober and oversees other recovering addicts. He is recovering from addiction to downers and a life of crime. Remy Marathe, (of unknown age) a legless Canadian, and member of a group of wheel chair assassins involved with the USA v. Canada's political/environmental/territorial mess. There are numerous sub-characters within these three facets of the story - the tennis academy, the halfway house, and the governments of the two countries. There is a prominent female character, Joelle van Dyne. She is involved with Orin Incandenza (Hal's older brother); James Incandenza (Hal's father); Mario Incandenza (Hal's younger, deformed, brother); and Don. She is also a person of interest i/r/t Remy's work. She is addicted to crack cocaine and a girl of exceptional beauty--the P.G.O.A.T.--the Prettiest Girl On The Planet. To me, none of the characters were all that likable. Setting: The story takes place mostly in and around Boston, Mass. USA in the near future [The book being written in the mid 90's.] year of 2007. It is spring through fall and there is rain, humid heat, and snow. The "action" is mostly in and around the tennis academy, the halfway house and the seedy underbelly of Boston. There is also the desert SW around Tucson. Wallace is the best I've ever read of painting landscape and cityscape with words. He is also the best at the littlest details of people behavior. [Reading him is in some ways like opening your eyes to the world for the first time.] The zeitgeist is a future that revolves around telecommunications and entertainment, both voice and video. It is eerily accurate i/r/t where we are today. [It was written pre Internet & wireless explosion.] Style: This is maybe where most people simply go batty and throw the book against the wall. There is no consistent POV or voice save for Wallace's. He breaks every rule (for writing) there is ... and yet he pulls it off. All the characters pretty much talk the same, with the same idiosyncrasies, i.e. Wallace's. He uses conjoined conjunctions up the wazoo: "And so but... That thus this is why... So and but that night's next ..." etc. He repeats words: "Then he considered that this was the only dream he could recall where even in the dream he knew that it was a dream, much less lay there considering the fact that he was considering the up-front dream quality of the dream he was dreaming." [then he adds, mocking himself] "It quickly got so multileveled and confusing that his eyes rolled back in his head." (pg. 830) Events are not lineal. Sometimes events and persons don't become clear for 100s of pages. He makes up words. He uses obscure words. He uses acronyms up the wazoo. He uses endnotes that are stories in and of themselves. The endnotes sometimes explain the main story. There can be page upon page w/o a paragraph break. His segues sometimes are just barely, and then ... the sidebar has next to nothing to do with anything except - the central theme(s). This is the where the personality factor of Openness factors in--if you're not of a like mind/brain--it'll drive you nuts. The story has no ending, the book ends. Theme: The strongest case for reading this book. DFW says the book is about: Tennis; Addiction; & Entertainment. It is that, and more. Some readers struggle with the minutiae of tennis. But the game of tennis and the discipline required is a metaphor for life, in Wallace's mind. This is what is taught at the academy, and also all the AA stuff, characters and references. Delay of gratification and effort and struggle are their own rewards ... blah,blah, blah and yada, yada. Life is a GAME and it is not about you or who wins that matters. Ironically--nothing matters. Addiction is covered from head to toe, from its genesis to its usually horrific conclusion. You think you're not, addicted, maybe you should read this book for that reason. Entertainment and the individual and that relationship- ship's- ships' (Wallace's style is infectious) exploitation by design and by fate (Never named.). Then there is the issue of control, choice, and self-determination, which is the underpinning of The Game, Addictions, & Entertainment. Is it (control) really just a delusion? So why not - seek pleasure and submit to ecstasy? And running beneath the underpinning is all the unnamed Freudian stuff (Also, never named.)--that childhood decides. That even the best of intentions can have disastrous consequences, and not even here to get into all the horror of the ubiquitous neglectful, abusive, and incestuous parenting stuff that Wallace explores. And finally [not really possible] Wallace's take on reincarnation--that YOU will be killed by a woman, and that that woman will be your mother in your next life. Got time? Time to explore who you are and why you do what you do--to step outside your cage and study yourself as subject? Take a vacation ... haha.
Review: What Drives a Great Writer? - David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest (1996) and Don DeLillo's Underworld (1996) are each a great writer's take on the state of American culture at the end of the 20th Century, and can be read together to form the kind of comprehensive picture of our social universe that only great novelists can provide. One (DeLillo's Underworld) looks backward from the point in time of the end of the cold war to its earliest days and traces its key characters through their formative years into maturity, with its narrative center of gravity the October 1962 nuclear crisis over the USSR's nuclear-armed missiles in Cuba as told by the stand-up comic Lenny Bruce, its cathetic object a baseball, and its aesthetic fulcrum the middle-aged Klara's massive project in the early 1990's to paint in bright colors an entire fleet of B-52 bombers mothballed in the Arizona desert. The other (DFW's Infinite Jest) looks forward from about the turn of the 21st century to the main narrative action of the novel that takes place in about 2010 (which DFW denominates as the "Year of the Depend Adult Undergarment"), with its cathetic object a tennis ball, and its aesthetic fulcrum the highly sought-after video film "Infinite Jest" that had culminated the film-directorial career of one James O. Incandenza, who commits (spectacular) suicide shortly after producing the film. Infinite Jest follows the three children of J.O. Incandenza (Oren - age 23, Mario - 19, and Hal - 17) during the latter part of the Y.D.A.U., the last two of whom are living at the tennis academy in suburban Boston founded by J.O. and now managed by his wife Avril and her new husband. (This is not the narrative structure of that great chronicler of the American pater familias, Joyce Carol Oates. The J.O. of DFW's Infinite Jest never appears as himself in the novel - although he is spoken about often, and he even appears early on in disguise to a ten-year old Hal.) Infinite Jest also follows the travails of a wacky group of residential inmates at a drug-and-alcohol recovery halfway house that is next door to the tennis academy and just down the hill from it. (Big Don Gately is the head night-duty resident, and one of his tasks is to keep a log of the inmates' activities and compliance with the house's rules, and to be available to provide a sympathetic ear to any insomniac in the early stages of withdrawal from substance abuse -- check out the early a.m. discussion between Gately and the new resident Joelle over why she wears a veil). These two groups have interlocking narratives that are both surprising and revealing, and form the bulk of the novel's attention, including as a key theme the question "What drives such high suicide rates in substance abusers?" But wait, there's more. In a dystopia reminiscent of Phillip K. Dick's masterpiece The Simulacra, America circa 2010 has morphed into an EU-like organization of the U.S., Canada, and Mexico, with a bland crooner for a President who seems much less than a real person, and with a knee-jerk response to the (inevitable) environmental crisis from toxic pollution that entailed cutting off most of Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine and forcibly making it part of Quebec (which DFW calls 'experialism'), building a giant plexiglass wall along the new border with giant fans the size of power plants to blow the Boston area's toxic air into the 'Concavity' now formed by the rejected part of the Northeast U.S., and using huge catapults to launch large bundles of garbage from Boston (nearby the tennis academy) into the Concavity. Needless to say, this has caused a group of disaffected Quebecois known as the 'Wheelchair Assassins' to plot revenge (they are legless, and like so much of the story, the etiology of their disability is explained in the extensive notes located at the end of the novel), and their weapon is the - reputedly - profoundly compelling last film by J.O. Incandenza, so compelling to watch that anyone who sees it can't stop watching it, to the point of dying of thirst, hunger, or whatever pathology is the result of constant repetitive viewing of a video film. (Yes, DFW is obviously a big fan of Monty Python.) The Wheelchair Assassins have set about locating the master copy (the extant copies are copy-protected, and anyway they can't view them for themselves since they would perish), which has taken them to the doorsteps of the children of J.O., and, mostly unknown to each of them, they are in mortal danger. OK, those are the main narrative threads. But there's so much more. Metafictional elements are brought out - among other things - by an academic-sounding narrator (who seems mainly to be the author of the endnotes) whose primary interest is cataloguing the J.O. Incandenza film oeuvre, mostly by listing them in chronological order and identifying actors, film type, camera type and techniques, etc. DFW travesties the self-important cant of the academic film-criticism industry throughout the novel - see especially the 9-page endnote 24, titled "J.O. Incandenza: A Filmography," referencing such erudite studies as Comstock, Posner, and Duquette, 'The Laughing Pathologists: Exemplary Works of the Anticonfluential Apres Garde: Some Analyses of the Movement Toward Stasis in North American Conceptual Film;' the listing in the endnote for the J.O. film 'Homo Duplex' - a "[p]arody of Woititz and Shulgin's 'poststructural antidocumentaries,' interviews with fourteen Americans who are named John Wayne but are not the legendary 20th-Century film actor John Wayne;" and the discussions at various places in the novel's text of J.O.'s 'The American Century as Seen Through a Brick,' and 'The Medusa v. The Odalisque.' Just listing a director's films and categorizing them according to some academics' notions of an artist's 'period' shows no depth, provides no insight into the human condition. But lucidly presenting the give-and-take of dialogue (often hilarious!) between DFW's key characters reveals insights into the big issues we typically try to cover over in the quotidian of our daily life: What is true freedom of action? What is best for us and how do we balance your interests with mine? How do we live a moral life while subjected to the compromises of our crass consumer culture? Check out the lengthy dialogue (middle of the novel) of the huge U.S. government covert operative Hugh Steeply (in character as 'Helen Steeply,' in drag, in heels, and after full-body electrolysis) with the Wheelchair Assassin 'Marathe' (all the time holding a machine pistol under the blanket covering his lap) on the subject of the utilitarian politics underlying every government's implied promise of fairness to its citizens. So what does drive a great writer like DFW (or Oates, or DeLillo, or Pynchon, or the other great late 20th-Century authors)? Well, DFW loves his damaged, mixed-up characters, and he lovingly tolerates their dingbat antics (the unattractive characters are mostly the political ones). He loves their stories, he loves their words, and he loves writing. It's love. (For TD.)

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Best Sellers Rank | #92,661 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #23 in Classic Literature & Fiction #70 in Literary Fiction (Books) #150 in Contemporary Literature & Fiction |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (6,219) |
| Dimensions  | 6 x 1.88 x 9.25 inches |
| Edition  | Anniversary |
| ISBN-10  | 0316066524 |
| ISBN-13  | 978-0316066525 |
| Item Weight  | 2.55 pounds |
| Language  | English |
| Print length  | 1079 pages |
| Publication date  | November 13, 2006 |
| Publisher  | Little, Brown Paperbacks |
| Reading age  | 1 year and up |

## Images

![Infinite Jest - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71J4YMYancL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ A working vacation
*by M***R on February 21, 2011*

INFINTE JEST. (1996) David Foster Wallace. Everything you have heard, read, and that has been said about Infinite Jest is true. Should YOU read it? Is the only relevant question. This book is work--it's going into the gym and the classroom. (It is 1079 pages and holding it requires strength and strategy. And Kindle, iPod, or cd isn't a remedy because of the classroom aspect--you will want to highlight, and write in the margins; and it requires two bookmarks--one for the body and one for the endnotes.) This book, though a novel, is a journey into the mind of David Foster Wallace and is one long suicide (Wallace hung himself 12 years after publication at age 46) note. But it is not grim and dour. It is, at times, gruesome and frightening, yes, and also funny, and always insightful into the human condition and especially the American pursuit of happiness and pleasure along with the concurrent escape from discomfort and pain. And mostly about the inherent and ironic conflict between pleasure and pain--how the relief of pain into pleasure ultimately creates more pain, which causes one to seek more relief/pleasure, i.e. a psychological and physiological trap--a cage with no way out ... except maybe through a Twelve-step program which is SO boring so as to be not worth the effort. And then, there is reincarnation--which DFW never calls by name (something he does with the Psychoanalytic Reaction Formation, also) but which plays a huge part in the story. Both. Should YOU read it? I rank it as one of the four best books of all time. I lived with it for three weeks pretty much not doing anything else but reading and thinking about what Wallace was saying. I stopped drinking (One theme is addiction) and didn't bother to go out or watch any entertainment or do any work of my own (writing). It, the book, moved into my mind--took up residence in my apartment, became my roommate. Of course that is ironic also because the book's first name was "A FAILED ENTERTAINMENT," and the book is the most entertaining thing I've ever experienced - passively; but then it is work so it's not completely passive, as say watching something - "spectation" Wallace calls it. What the book is is inside the brain of a particular personality who happens to be a genius with a photographic memory (which again he doesn't name but describes: "Hal [a central character] can summon a kind of mental Xerox of anything he'd ever read and basically read it all over again, at will, ... ." (Pg. 797) I think parts of Wallace surface in all of the characters (there are scores of them) and what he does is to debate through interior and exterior dialogue, btw & w/in characters. Ideas/thoughts/philosophy (and of course this is discussed. He also critiques his own writing style via this, his technique,) Wallace's personality is, if categorized by the trait theory of The Big Five (OCEAN) [I think]: Extremely high O (open) slightly less but still very high C (conscientiousness), somewhat low E (extraversion, i.e Introverted), somewhat low A (agreeableness) and somewhat above average N (neuroticism). Add to that an extremely high I.Q. with that memory thing, a large physical presence (6'2, 200lbs.) and a cute and interesting face and you've got the man. If you think you can relate to those characteristics--you'll probably be taken by, and drawn into the novel as I was. [About being high O. Highly Open persons tend to be bored by people below them on the continuum, which looks like arrogance, elitism, snobbery, creative showoffishness, etc. Openness is the trait most associated with creativity. They also tend to be low in A (a `pussified' trait) for obvious reasons.] That by way of introduction. Briefly now, a look at Infinite Jest by way of the six elements of a story. Title: Perfect, either one. Defines the book. Plot: There is only a very almost inconsequential one. It is sometimes a distraction. It is about the relationship btwn the USA and Canada and the use and disposal/reuse of energy and territory. In an interesting way - it is woven into the pleasure/pain conundrum and so therefore worth some consideration. The personal and political intersect with, I think, some very bizarre drug enhanced imaginative thoughts and ideas. Free association. Characterization: There are three main protagonists. Hal Incandenza, a 17 yr.old, privileged white boy, at an elite youth tennis academy in Massachusetts; founded by his father (alcoholic) and run by his mother (OCD). Hal is addicted to marijuana and nicotine and a gifted and highly rated tennis prospect. He has younger residents/students/players he mentors, as well as two brothers who play prominent roles. Don Gately, a 29 yr. old, staff resident of a halfway house for recovering substance abusers, located adjacent to the tennis academy. Don is 9 months sober and oversees other recovering addicts. He is recovering from addiction to downers and a life of crime. Remy Marathe, (of unknown age) a legless Canadian, and member of a group of wheel chair assassins involved with the USA v. Canada's political/environmental/territorial mess. There are numerous sub-characters within these three facets of the story - the tennis academy, the halfway house, and the governments of the two countries. There is a prominent female character, Joelle van Dyne. She is involved with Orin Incandenza (Hal's older brother); James Incandenza (Hal's father); Mario Incandenza (Hal's younger, deformed, brother); and Don. She is also a person of interest i/r/t Remy's work. She is addicted to crack cocaine and a girl of exceptional beauty--the P.G.O.A.T.--the Prettiest Girl On The Planet. To me, none of the characters were all that likable. Setting: The story takes place mostly in and around Boston, Mass. USA in the near future [The book being written in the mid 90's.] year of 2007. It is spring through fall and there is rain, humid heat, and snow. The "action" is mostly in and around the tennis academy, the halfway house and the seedy underbelly of Boston. There is also the desert SW around Tucson. Wallace is the best I've ever read of painting landscape and cityscape with words. He is also the best at the littlest details of people behavior. [Reading him is in some ways like opening your eyes to the world for the first time.] The zeitgeist is a future that revolves around telecommunications and entertainment, both voice and video. It is eerily accurate i/r/t where we are today. [It was written pre Internet & wireless explosion.] Style: This is maybe where most people simply go batty and throw the book against the wall. There is no consistent POV or voice save for Wallace's. He breaks every rule (for writing) there is ... and yet he pulls it off. All the characters pretty much talk the same, with the same idiosyncrasies, i.e. Wallace's. He uses conjoined conjunctions up the wazoo: "And so but... That thus this is why... So and but that night's next ..." etc. He repeats words: "Then he considered that this was the only dream he could recall where even in the dream he knew that it was a dream, much less lay there considering the fact that he was considering the up-front dream quality of the dream he was dreaming." [then he adds, mocking himself] "It quickly got so multileveled and confusing that his eyes rolled back in his head." (pg. 830) Events are not lineal. Sometimes events and persons don't become clear for 100s of pages. He makes up words. He uses obscure words. He uses acronyms up the wazoo. He uses endnotes that are stories in and of themselves. The endnotes sometimes explain the main story. There can be page upon page w/o a paragraph break. His segues sometimes are just barely, and then ... the sidebar has next to nothing to do with anything except - the central theme(s). This is the where the personality factor of Openness factors in--if you're not of a like mind/brain--it'll drive you nuts. The story has no ending, the book ends. Theme: The strongest case for reading this book. DFW says the book is about: Tennis; Addiction; & Entertainment. It is that, and more. Some readers struggle with the minutiae of tennis. But the game of tennis and the discipline required is a metaphor for life, in Wallace's mind. This is what is taught at the academy, and also all the AA stuff, characters and references. Delay of gratification and effort and struggle are their own rewards ... blah,blah, blah and yada, yada. Life is a GAME and it is not about you or who wins that matters. Ironically--nothing matters. Addiction is covered from head to toe, from its genesis to its usually horrific conclusion. You think you're not, addicted, maybe you should read this book for that reason. Entertainment and the individual and that relationship- ship's- ships' (Wallace's style is infectious) exploitation by design and by fate (Never named.). Then there is the issue of control, choice, and self-determination, which is the underpinning of The Game, Addictions, & Entertainment. Is it (control) really just a delusion? So why not - seek pleasure and submit to ecstasy? And running beneath the underpinning is all the unnamed Freudian stuff (Also, never named.)--that childhood decides. That even the best of intentions can have disastrous consequences, and not even here to get into all the horror of the ubiquitous neglectful, abusive, and incestuous parenting stuff that Wallace explores. And finally [not really possible] Wallace's take on reincarnation--that YOU will be killed by a woman, and that that woman will be your mother in your next life. Got time? Time to explore who you are and why you do what you do--to step outside your cage and study yourself as subject? Take a vacation ... haha.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ What Drives a Great Writer?
*by J***S on July 21, 2016*

David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest (1996) and Don DeLillo's Underworld (1996) are each a great writer's take on the state of American culture at the end of the 20th Century, and can be read together to form the kind of comprehensive picture of our social universe that only great novelists can provide. One (DeLillo's Underworld) looks backward from the point in time of the end of the cold war to its earliest days and traces its key characters through their formative years into maturity, with its narrative center of gravity the October 1962 nuclear crisis over the USSR's nuclear-armed missiles in Cuba as told by the stand-up comic Lenny Bruce, its cathetic object a baseball, and its aesthetic fulcrum the middle-aged Klara's massive project in the early 1990's to paint in bright colors an entire fleet of B-52 bombers mothballed in the Arizona desert. The other (DFW's Infinite Jest) looks forward from about the turn of the 21st century to the main narrative action of the novel that takes place in about 2010 (which DFW denominates as the "Year of the Depend Adult Undergarment"), with its cathetic object a tennis ball, and its aesthetic fulcrum the highly sought-after video film "Infinite Jest" that had culminated the film-directorial career of one James O. Incandenza, who commits (spectacular) suicide shortly after producing the film. Infinite Jest follows the three children of J.O. Incandenza (Oren - age 23, Mario - 19, and Hal - 17) during the latter part of the Y.D.A.U., the last two of whom are living at the tennis academy in suburban Boston founded by J.O. and now managed by his wife Avril and her new husband. (This is not the narrative structure of that great chronicler of the American pater familias, Joyce Carol Oates. The J.O. of DFW's Infinite Jest never appears as himself in the novel - although he is spoken about often, and he even appears early on in disguise to a ten-year old Hal.) Infinite Jest also follows the travails of a wacky group of residential inmates at a drug-and-alcohol recovery halfway house that is next door to the tennis academy and just down the hill from it. (Big Don Gately is the head night-duty resident, and one of his tasks is to keep a log of the inmates' activities and compliance with the house's rules, and to be available to provide a sympathetic ear to any insomniac in the early stages of withdrawal from substance abuse -- check out the early a.m. discussion between Gately and the new resident Joelle over why she wears a veil). These two groups have interlocking narratives that are both surprising and revealing, and form the bulk of the novel's attention, including as a key theme the question "What drives such high suicide rates in substance abusers?" But wait, there's more. In a dystopia reminiscent of Phillip K. Dick's masterpiece The Simulacra, America circa 2010 has morphed into an EU-like organization of the U.S., Canada, and Mexico, with a bland crooner for a President who seems much less than a real person, and with a knee-jerk response to the (inevitable) environmental crisis from toxic pollution that entailed cutting off most of Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine and forcibly making it part of Quebec (which DFW calls 'experialism'), building a giant plexiglass wall along the new border with giant fans the size of power plants to blow the Boston area's toxic air into the 'Concavity' now formed by the rejected part of the Northeast U.S., and using huge catapults to launch large bundles of garbage from Boston (nearby the tennis academy) into the Concavity. Needless to say, this has caused a group of disaffected Quebecois known as the 'Wheelchair Assassins' to plot revenge (they are legless, and like so much of the story, the etiology of their disability is explained in the extensive notes located at the end of the novel), and their weapon is the - reputedly - profoundly compelling last film by J.O. Incandenza, so compelling to watch that anyone who sees it can't stop watching it, to the point of dying of thirst, hunger, or whatever pathology is the result of constant repetitive viewing of a video film. (Yes, DFW is obviously a big fan of Monty Python.) The Wheelchair Assassins have set about locating the master copy (the extant copies are copy-protected, and anyway they can't view them for themselves since they would perish), which has taken them to the doorsteps of the children of J.O., and, mostly unknown to each of them, they are in mortal danger. OK, those are the main narrative threads. But there's so much more. Metafictional elements are brought out - among other things - by an academic-sounding narrator (who seems mainly to be the author of the endnotes) whose primary interest is cataloguing the J.O. Incandenza film oeuvre, mostly by listing them in chronological order and identifying actors, film type, camera type and techniques, etc. DFW travesties the self-important cant of the academic film-criticism industry throughout the novel - see especially the 9-page endnote 24, titled "J.O. Incandenza: A Filmography," referencing such erudite studies as Comstock, Posner, and Duquette, 'The Laughing Pathologists: Exemplary Works of the Anticonfluential Apres Garde: Some Analyses of the Movement Toward Stasis in North American Conceptual Film;' the listing in the endnote for the J.O. film 'Homo Duplex' - a "[p]arody of Woititz and Shulgin's 'poststructural antidocumentaries,' interviews with fourteen Americans who are named John Wayne but are not the legendary 20th-Century film actor John Wayne;" and the discussions at various places in the novel's text of J.O.'s 'The American Century as Seen Through a Brick,' and 'The Medusa v. The Odalisque.' Just listing a director's films and categorizing them according to some academics' notions of an artist's 'period' shows no depth, provides no insight into the human condition. But lucidly presenting the give-and-take of dialogue (often hilarious!) between DFW's key characters reveals insights into the big issues we typically try to cover over in the quotidian of our daily life: What is true freedom of action? What is best for us and how do we balance your interests with mine? How do we live a moral life while subjected to the compromises of our crass consumer culture? Check out the lengthy dialogue (middle of the novel) of the huge U.S. government covert operative Hugh Steeply (in character as 'Helen Steeply,' in drag, in heels, and after full-body electrolysis) with the Wheelchair Assassin 'Marathe' (all the time holding a machine pistol under the blanket covering his lap) on the subject of the utilitarian politics underlying every government's implied promise of fairness to its citizens. So what does drive a great writer like DFW (or Oates, or DeLillo, or Pynchon, or the other great late 20th-Century authors)? Well, DFW loves his damaged, mixed-up characters, and he lovingly tolerates their dingbat antics (the unattractive characters are mostly the political ones). He loves their stories, he loves their words, and he loves writing. It's love. (For TD.)

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Great Read!
*by S***Y on September 18, 2025*

I've heard a lot about this book, with many people calling it a challenging read due to its complex structure, the large number of characters and story lines, use of unnecessary and sometimes irrelevant footnotes, and non-linear narrative. I think these people are missing the point! JFW wrote in a style that literally and figuratively expresses the experience of information overload and getting lost down rabbit holes, as well as themes of addiction, entertainment, politics, capitalism, and mental health. It's sad and funny all at once. But is this book for you? If you like things to make sense right out of the gate, if you're Type A, results-oriented, goal-driven, or lack a sense of subtlety or patience, this is NOT the book for you. But if you're willing to read with an open mind and let the stories open themselves to you, without needing to understand it all (which you won't, as in life) then this book will reward you with pathos and insight and some laugh-out-loud funny moments, as well as soul-sucking tragedy. It's a story about the world we all live in. It's actually quite an easy, conversational read so far. I'd give it 5 stars except I haven't finished yet, so I can't speak to the book as a whole. I know I will finish it, though. I just couldn't wait to share my thoughts!

## Frequently Bought Together

- Infinite Jest
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