I have been perplexed by references to the use of Lemon Pledge as a sunscreen each of the several times I have started (but never finished) reading IJ. The first reference appears near the bottom of p. 99: “It turns out Lemon Pledge, when it’s applied in pre-play stasis and allowed to dry to a thin crust, is a phenomenal sunscreen, UV rating like 40+, and the only stuff anywhere than can survive a three-set sweat.” Its use for this purpose is subsequently mentioned at various points in the ETA/Hal narrative.
As a resident of Phoenix, whose climate is aptly described by Orin early in the book, and a runner, I was intrigued by DFW’s possible discovery of a kick-ass sunscreen.
I did a little casual research on Google, and found that the issue has intrigued other readers. The consensus seems to be that not only is Lemon Pledge not useful as a sunscreen, but that contact with the skin can be harmful. (Interestingly, the search for “Lemon Pledge sunscreen” yielded a gem that is sufficiently bizarre to have been conceived by DFW himself. In a forum for soldiers serving in Iraq and Afghanistan (whose climates resemble Arizona’s) called “The Sandbox,” (
http://gocomics.typepad.com/the_sandbox ... y-sup.html), a GI posted a lengthy discussion of the many utterly useless provisions that were shipped to his unit, which included the following statement: “Some of the things we get we just have to scratch our heads, because we don't know why anyone would ask for it -- i.e. 25 cases of Lemon Pledge. We can't give most of it back. No one else wants it either.” Among the replies was a suggestion that the Lemon Pledge may have been intended as sunscreen, because “it really works.”)
In any event, I have tentatively concluded that DFW was bullshitting us with the Lemon Pledge. It continues to intrigue, however, because it seems that little, if anything, in IJ was included by chance. Why, then, Lemon Pledge? Why not Nutella or motor oil or any of an infinite variety of other substances that could have been allegedly used at ETA for sunscreen? I have wracked my brain for any significance to the choice of Lemon Pledge.
Another possibility just perverse enough to fit the tone of IJ is that Lemon Pledge is what Hitchcock called a “Macguffin,” a false hint dropped by DFW to mock the reader who seeks significance in every object and reference, just as we did our high school English teachers who found what we mockingly called “hidden inner meaning” in the required reading, i.e., the symbolism of the Dr. Eckleburg billboard in “The Great Gatsby.”
I wondered if anyone had any ideas.
Ron Kershaw