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infinite jest
Infinite Jest

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List Price: $17.99
Our Price: $12.23
Your Save: $ 5.76 ( 32% )
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Paperback Dewey Decimal Number: 813.083 EAN: 9780316066525 ISBN: 0316066524 Label: Back Bay Books Manufacturer: Back Bay Books Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 1104 Publication Date: 2006-11-13 Publisher: Back Bay Books Studio: Back Bay Books
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Editorial Reviews:
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In a sprawling, wild, super-hyped magnum opus, David Foster Wallace fulfills the promise of his precocious novelThe Broom of the System.Equal parts philosophical quest and screwball comedy, Infinite Jest bends every rule of fiction, features a huge cast and multilevel narrative, and questions essential elements of American culture - our entertainments, our addictions, our relationships, our pleasures, our abilities to define ourselves.
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: This Emperor Has No Clothes Comment: I just finished laboring through Infinite Jest, and have to say that this may well be the most incoherent, unsatisfying novel I've ever read. In short doses, it's intriguing, but the sheer length (about 1,000 pages, and boy do I pity the editor) would suggest that there would be some degree of resolution by the end of this arduous journey. But there isn't.
The book starts with an interesting set of scenes (a top-ranked tennis player getting rejected at the University of Arizona after a medical/psychotic meltdown in the Admissions office, a set of odd interactions around procuring drugs in Boston). But we then go back in time, never to emerge. When I finally got to the novel's conclusion, I just couldn't believe that so much undisciplined, rambling prose would leave the reader out in the wilderness.
Save yourself lots of time and find another book to read.
Customer Rating:      Summary: This is how God Writes Comment: Brilliance--pure and simple, being qualifications of brilliance--or rather, the qualifications of the qualification of brilliance, as in anyone can see this novel is a product of brilliance--not the novel, which is dirty and complex and: BRILLIANT. This is how God writes. You could swear this book had at least three authors as its motley of characters communicate with a detailed affectation that seems impossible to foster in a single individual. Please note: I resisted the urge to parenthetically state there was no pun intended after "foster" in the last sentence. Too cliche--something Wallace would execrate. If you're fascinated by drugs, the human condition, tennis, and/or violence, then this book is for you. This is an excellent book for aspiring writers; this is an awful book for people of average to less-than-average intelligence. DFW, requiescat in pace. I love you more than anyone I've ever known.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Infinitely illiterate Comment: Infinite Jest
Save yourself the trouble, do not buy, borrow, or worst of all, attempt to read this book.
It is a rambling, prolix, repetitive outpouring of techno-babble, with an invented universe of characters of no interest, sentences too long to unravel (even the author seems to forget to match subject with far-distant predicate on occasions), and an invisible plot.
I borrowed the book, determined with my characteristic tenacity to wade through at least the first 100 of its almost 1000 pages. I made it to page 103, by which time no character held any interest, the story (if there was one) had eluded me, and I found my eyelids dropping at the very thought of opening it to read a few more tortuous pages.
I am fortified by the knowledge that Time Magazine disagrees with me, citing it as one of the best 100 novels written since 1923. And this from the magazine that supported US policy in Vietnam.
If you want to find out about drugs, buy the Pharmocopeia, or read William Burroughs. If you want to read about tennis, buy McEnroe's autobiography. If you want to spend a dozen hours trying to unravel a discontinuous narrative full of unconnected arcane technicalities, attempt to read Infinite Jest.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Infinite Loss Comment: Every word is hilarious including the prepositions. So much to love. So much to grieve.
Customer Rating:      Summary: A Masterpiece That Has No Peers Comment: Don't let its length or erudition on subjects such as competitive tennis, pharmacology, AA, Quebecquois separatist groups and a game called Eschaton put you off. Ignore the reviews by people who think Wallace's fiction is accessible only to academics and literary pros. Great literature is for everyone, and Infinite Jest is great. Its multi-faceted story and spectacular language are the work of a master. And unlike some of its imitations, Infinite Jest is both profound and funny.
A caveat: this is not the kind of book you can pick up and put down. You really need to read it daily in order to keep track of the many characters and stories. But it's a lot of fun.
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