I've been wondering if DFW's use of single quotation marks for dialogue is just a style thing, or if there is some other practical purpose (e.g., how many pages would be added to the novel if all the single quotation marks were converted to double?).
Elegant Complexity mentions this, but not the reason (as far as I can tell so far). I'm just wondering if there is maybe an intention for us to view the entire novel as a narration (perhaps by a narrator not necessarily completely trustworthy, as opposed to an omniscient author), such that the punctuation for all dialogue would be single quotation marks (as appropriate punctuation for quotations within quotations).
Apologies if this has been addressed...the board is growing!
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