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David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest
 
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David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest [Paperback]

Stephen J. Burn
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
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Review

"The series comes as near to squaring various circles - popular / academic, "˜good read' / "˜classic Lit', novel / film of the book as any I know. And at best it goes a fair way towards reshuffling those categories and redrawing the boundaries. With the first volume, I was relieved. After two or three, I was hooked.

The books are invaluable for gathering out-of-the-way or ephemeral comment from TV and radio interviews and the web as well as from literary reviews.

Refreshingly upfront and up-to-date

Given the space, there are remarkably balanced film/novel comparisons of the most well-known examples

An important feature is the fully referenced bibliographies, including reviews and copious website addresses - the latter ranging from fanzines and authors' and publishers' own sites to academic discussion lists and online journals.

In method as in subject matter, these guides move freely on the interface between print culture and multimedia. Highly finished and pleasantly handleable as books in their own right, they gesture accommodatingly to both words and worlds beyond.

Taking the series as a whole, it also confirms two things: that narrative nowadays is generically highly hybrid and increasingly cross-media; and that an understanding of the processes of writing and reading "˜contemporary classic' (or at least "˜currently famous') fiction cannot be separated - yet must be distinguished - from the processes of making and marketing books and films."
- Professor Rob Pope, The Times Higher Education Supplement, May 31, 2002


"Burn does a terrific job of placing "Infinite Jest" in the tradition of the encyclopedic novel, explaining the novel's chronology, and demonstrating the subtle points of intersection and narrative intertwining among the many plots. It is in making the case for the novel's careful structure that this study is most valuable(Burn's David Foster Wallace's "Infinite Jest": A Reader's Guide) offers more than its size promises." -Robert L. McLaughlin in Review of Contemporary Fiction (Robert L. McLaughlin )

"Burn does a terrific job of placing Infinite Jest in the tradition of the encyclopedic novel, explaining the novel's chronology, and demonstrating the subtle points of intersection and narrative intertwining among the many plots." -Robert L. McLaughlin, Review of Contemporary Fiction, Vol. 14, No. 2, 2004

"Burn does a terrific job of placing "Infinite Jest" in the tradition of the encyclopedic novel, explaining the novel's chronology, and demonstrating the subtle points of intersection and narrative intertwining among the many plots. It is in making the case for the novel's careful structure that this study is most valuable(Burn's David Foster Wallace's "Infinite Jest": A Reader's Guide) offers more than its size promises." -Robert L. McLaughlin in Review of Contemporary Fiction (, )

Product Description

This is part of a new series of guides to contemporary novels. The aim of the series is to give readers accessible and informative introductions to some of the most popular, most acclaimed and most influential novels of recent years - from "˜The Remains of the Day' to "˜White Teeth'. A team of contemporary fiction scholars from both sides of the Atlantic has been assembled to provide a thorough and readable analysis of each of the novels in question.

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5.0 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Illuminating Guide, Aug 14 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest (Paperback)
If Infinite Jest has become the Ulysses of the late twentieth century, then this excellent guide is the equivalent of Stuart Gilbert's companion to Joyce's masterpiece: Burn offers a lucid unravelling of some of the more mysterious aspects of Wallace's book (what exactly is up with Hal, where the mastercopy of the film is at a given time), but he also demonstrates fascinating parallels with books like The Golden Bough that I'd never thought of. It's also mercifully free of the kind of esoteric literary theory that spoils so many literary studies - refreshingly Burn prefers to situate the novel alongside the work of writers like Jonathan Franzen, and William Gaddis.

The book is short (you sometimes get the feeling that Burns wants to say more but doesn't have space) but within those limitations this is a fine study of a terrific novel - highly recommended.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant, humble analysis, July 1 2003
By 
George Carr (Cleveland, OH United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest (Paperback)
I've been a fan of IJ since reading it in the summer of '96, but I've never read such a lucid and thoughtful analysis as this book provides. Burns has put enormous effort into analyzing Wallace's writing style, and avoids the simple analysis that Wallace is concsiously trying to undermine. Even though there are many subjects in the book that I would love Burns' opinion on, he is forthcoming about the limitations of the 'readers' guide' format, and has chosen his few topics for detailed analysis with care and skill.

I especially liked his understanding and analysis of IJ's literary context: rather than simplistically comparing Wallace's work to Pynchon or DeLillo, as many have done, he explores the richer tradition of myth materials and 20th-century literature that informs Wallace's brilliant novel.

My only criticism is Burns' failure to comment on Wallace's sense of humor, which was one of the reasons I loved IJ so much, and why I find it worth re-reading from time to time. I've enjoyed other writers endorsed by Wallace, like Irvine Welsh and Dave Eggers, but some literary analysis of Wallace's effective use of different varieties of humor would have been helpful. Still, given the lucid and concise analysis Burns provides, this criticism should be understood as part of my wishlist, not any negative take on Burns' sense of humor.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Exceptional, Jun 12 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: David Foster Wallace's Infinite Jest (Paperback)
A remarkable book - and a fitting tribute to DFW's wonderful novel. Quite how Stephen Burn has managed to cram so much lucid opinion and information into a book of this brevity is beyond me, but he should be warmly applauded for doing so. One quibble only, for the publishers: labelling this book a 'readers guide' is doing it a disservice. Burn's book is much, much more than that.
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