Okay, so maybe this is the maternal instinct (and amateur chef) part of me coming out but have you noticed something about food in the book? I noticed the absence of anything but unhealthy food, i.e. in the Erdedy section and then, when I got to the description of Don Gately's weekly fare at Ennet House, there it was again.
For a story that puts so much emphasis on conditioning young bodies into fine athletes this seems like an interesting omission. The daily routine doesn't include sitting down to a "real food meal"* with the drool-inducing masterful descriptions that DFW would be surely be able to give.
Also, with the strong emphasis on healing of minds I've got to admit here that being experienced with depression and addictive tendencies myself, even simple healthy food made with love, skill, or both is the first line of defense tied with, or surpassing the importance of, therapy. Of course, that _is_ sometimes the first thing that goes, unfortunately. If appetite is non-existent, in no other daily stress-induced situation does it seem more important to Fake It To Make It, in order to prevent sinking even lower. Recall the character of Smilla in Smilla's sense of snow who talked about how in the arctic coldness of her winters it was very important to have hot food every day in order to keep her mood, which was very dark, from getting any darker.
How often is this subject touched upon in fiction? Well, maybe not very often, but this is an encyclopedic novel _and_ there's so much in it about bodies. There's so much in it about pleasure--oral gratification. Why not about _healthy_ oral gratification? Why not about what bodies optimally have to take in--(other than the drugs, which sometimes can be optimal too, for self-medicating purposes when other things don't work). Why the minutiae of the perfecting of the physical system in other ways, but not that? Avril doesn't seem to be particularly into inviting her boys over from the dorm for a lavish home-cooked meal. The boys don't associate "Mother" with good food, like some people do. Maybe this will come up later in the book if there's more about the childhoods of the boys. Many people's good memories of childhood involve food, why not Hal's or Orin's or Don's?
I just read Don DeLillo's Underworld, another encyclopedic novel, which talks about how food makes life, especially family life, richer. The proverbial "food is love" theme. In the good sense, not the Overeaters Anonymous sense. (But then, he was Italian--but so are the Incandenzas, but not the Moms). And that is how I started thinking about this issue. (I would have loved to see DFW's description of a "Babbette's Feast" type of meal.)
Also interesting that he doesn't seem to have any food addicts in the book, although there are a couple of very overweight types.
Consider also how DFW talks about the _by-products_ of eating a fair amount, E.T.A. students puking, people defecating while watching the entertainment and the men in the Shattuck Homeless men's shelter leaving various versions of their waste products in the showers for Don G. to clean. (Poor Tony's waste products seem more like a pouring out, a hollowing of his very guts, though.)
I would like to invite all the Ennet House residents and E.T.A. students to a huge home-cooked banquet!
*Incredible String Band, "Way Back In the 1960's"
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