I must confess that Dunces still sits in my "must read before too much longer" pile (where it's been for far too long . . . ). I have to resist going off on my beloved AmLit tangents but doggonit, IJ keeps revealing itself to have been influenced by some of the best of the bunch as DFW put his own brilliant touch on this wacky & wild North American existence. I've been reminded of Gatsby several times since joining this thread, and I've got to believe that Melville's in there, as well (he himself having been influenced by Hamlet and other Will S.), e.g. w/r/t the various masks that man tries to hide behind and/or "strike through." I've vowed to refamiliarize myself with Hamlet once finished with IJ. As far as the humor factor that facetioushorse discusses, I'm totally on board with that; the moment of "insight" I had yesterday merely involves a connection enabled by the image of body-shaped chunks of Lemon Pledge that another contributor also alluded to, and that come up again in another context. Overall, I've been blown away as never before in Wallace's work with his use of the language in brilliantly original humorous and/or metaphorical ways (e.g. the "incisionish" nature of a jet's vapor trail, early on). Thanks for the responses; I'm quite new to this kind of online forum-participation thing and am happy for the added incentive to stay with the novel for the duration this time . . . (By the way, how do you include a piece of another entry in your own, as you did mine, ontour?)
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