I can't speak for everyone, of course, but I finished the book over a month ago and still can't stop thinking about it. Whether trying to peek more carefully into the unanswered questions and other elements of the construction of the book, or trying to think through how the ideas in the book should affect my life...
Obviously that's how DFW wrote the book. Something like a Shakespearian play, you can get a lot out of, but you can also just put it down, because on the surface it has all the elements of hack writing: characters, tensions, a plot, a resolution. "Infinite Jest" doesn't have a traditional plot, much less a traditional resolution, so whether you want to try to piece together the plot or try to find the resolution in all the beautiful little cul-de-sacs in IJ, the reader is forced to be involved in a way that most great fiction allows but doesn't demand.
My newfound obsession with this book makes me want to carefully re-read the M*A*S*H section... even at the time I realized that that was DFW's final word to the book's most ardent fans, but I don't know whether he's trying to discourage the obsession or merely differentiate between an obsession with commercial crud like M*A*S*H and carefully crafted and planned novels.
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