That's also the first essay in A supposedly Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again (but under a different name). Also, Hal's addiction to lexicography, and the influence of the Moms in that area, would have been strange to me, but his essay Authority and American Usage (Or, Politics and the English Language is Redundant), which is technically a book review, talks about lexicography to great lengths, and DFW talks about his upbringing as a SNOOT ("Syntax Nudniks of our Time"), which is a nickname for a grammar/usage nut. DFW wrote about how his mother would pretend to have coughing fits if one of the children made a grammar/usage mistake, and would continue with the fit until said child would identify and correct the mistake. He also goes into detail about the Prescriptive/Descriptive Grammar "war," one he makes literal in Infinite Jest (look it up, much to complicated to go into here). Very funny and fascinating essay, but for some reason a little difficult to get through for me.
Anyway, yes, I agree, IJ is slightly (or very) autobiographical.
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