Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by character0 2494 days ago
There is a certain amount of absurdism that you need to buy into, but once you do there is so much to the book (it's also quite funny). DFW dives into themes of addiction, mental health, modernism, etc. He clearly struggled with a lot of these ideas in his own life, and he captures it so well in the cast of characters he creates. I personally found the first 250 pages a little tough, but once I got through that it became hard to put it down.
1 comments

It’s a book that really needs to be read twice, if only to fully appreciate those first 250 pages. They go from not making sense at all to being quite good.