Infinite Winter 2016 discussion
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I use reading IJ to escape. It's a place to feel less alone, to laugh, and a reminder of how much fun a difficult time can be.
I look forward to taking the journey with others for the first time.

I'm a 35 yo teacher from central México, first time reader, music lover, will read anything.
Loving the book so far. I had never read anything so intelligently written, so cold, sad and disconnected before and I can only see it getting better. I'm also a big 90s nostalgist, so that's another reason I decided to dive into IJ.
Hope you all have fun and share whatever you feel like sharing while we read together.

Here's a quick one I threw together yesterday.
Infinite Winter '16 Vol. 1, the 90s (B.S.)
https://open.spotify.com/user/salvado...

I attempted to read Infinite Jest for the first time during Infinite Summer. I made it about 100 pages in and bailed out. My husband, Jeff, finished and blogged some along the way (https://infinitetasks.wordpress.com).
The following summer, I was one of three guides for a group reading of one of my favorite anarchist texts, Letters of Insurgents (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Letters...), which we called Insurgent Summer. Shortly after that, I read, finished and enjoyed my first DFW book, The Pale King. Later, Jeff re-read IJ and taught a class on it for the Great Books program at USF, where he is a philosophy professor.
About six months ago, I began writing a novel of my own and uncovered that IJ and DFW influence two of my characters (one based loosely on my husband), so I decided to give it another go, this time with a “Professor of Infinite Jest” at the ready for questions and a pre-highlighted copy of the book. When I heard about Infinite Winter, I thought it would be a great way to keep myself going and I gained a bit of confidence by already having some pages under my belt (twice).

I'm 43, live in Calgary, work in nonprofit, and once made an offer with my partner that I would read the entire Dark Tower series by Stephen King if he would read IJ. I did it, he reneged.

I'm sharing my drawings from the text.
https://twitter.com/infinitejensen

I'm italian, and back in 2011 I tried to read the book Himself in english. I had to quit after a hundred and thirty pages 'cause I was jumping too often back and forth between the book and the dictionary (and, still, feel confused about the direction of the plot). So, I decided to take a step back and read it in italian, and for three months I was so addicted to it that, in some ways, it felt like I was actually living in the book (not a great way to phrase it, but it's the closer I can get to describe it).
Then I tried to re-read it in english a few more times but, even if I found the original version way better than the italian translation, I never quite had the perseverance to finish it. Actually, I was waiting for an opportunity like Infinite Winter.
I'm also following Mike Miley's Filmography Pairings, just watched "Videodrome" and it...fits like a glove!

Tried IJ last year and it sent me into a reading slump but this time round im loving it!! :)




I'm Ashlyn, 29yo software dev in Denver, CO. This is my first attempt at reading IJ, and I've never read any other Wallace pieces. I am a member of a couple other online bookclubs, so IJ over 13 weeks is perfect for me. I tend to read a lot of classics and po-mo pieces rather than bestsellers. I'm a pretty critical reader, but I'm open to almost anything.
I'm planning on supplementing the reading with Mike Miley's Filmography Pairings. Is anyone else doing this, or with another set of films/visual media? It would be cool to see a list of music to pair with it as well.
Happy reading, fellow Jesters!