Reviews

Consider The Lobster: Essays and Arguments by David Foster Wallace

caseyaonso's review against another edition

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5.0

my replacement glasses finally came in so i could finish this! (trying to read dfw’s notorious footnote yapping while holding a book a cm from my face simply wasnt the loveliest reading experience lmfao). i know he gets shit for it but i actually enjoy the footnotes. maybe it’s because the pacing of the interjections feels conversational to me rather than annoying but i can understand why it wouldnt be everyone’s cup of tea (the host essay especially jdjkfjs the arrows were sending me

lily08's review against another edition

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challenging funny informative medium-paced

4.25

bansolitude's review against another edition

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challenging informative reflective slow-paced

4.0


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greta_macionyte's review against another edition

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4.0

Due to the excessive use of footnotes, some narratives are hard to follow, and one even might feel lost. Nevertheless, each and every one of these essays is like an unexpected intellectual road trip - exciting, thought-provoking, and you end up somewhere completely different than you'd anticipated. I was surprised at how relevant his work stayed throughout the years. It's like DFW understood what problems would become major issues in Western societies two decades later - from increased porn consumption to ethical dietary choices to politics and the dangers of politized media.

lexiemarley's review against another edition

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funny informative medium-paced

4.0

bittersweet_symphony's review against another edition

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4.0

If only it didn't take me several months from the day I started this book to finish it!

David Foster Wallace is a unique, and rarely trustworthy voice. His commentary is human and not entirely void of bias--thankfully--but he is a person whose perspective I would rely on for any topic or issue save quantum physics or improving upon my intimate hygiene routine. He treats every viewpoint with unreal fairness and kindness, all the while challenging them in the most pointed way.

I wish his essays remained fresh in my mind, but most of his insights have left me.

DFW was doing something all his own, processing the world and connecting things in the most unusual manner. He made the most mundane and banal (note: I have never read anybody who has used this word more than DFW) subjects as vehicles for talking about the most profound questions we wrestle with--or, should wrestle with.

I look forward to reading more of his writings, and every time I do, I will quietly scream against the cosmos for allowing his voice to go silent. Another tormented sage taken too soon. If you haven't read DFW, do it now. Right now. I will never read, write, or think the same again. Near the end of his life he voiced his constant fear that the world would realize he was a fraud or impostor, that he wasn't the genius they claimed he was. He is the least of us who should be troubled by this. He is the real deal.

desertmichelle's review against another edition

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Just not my cup of tea.

egrecu's review against another edition

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challenging informative slow-paced

orestesfasting's review against another edition

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challenging informative reflective medium-paced

4.5

DFW's feature and bug are one and the same; his style is easily parodiable, in that it is self-reflective/self-critiquing to the point of self-destruction, simultaneously offering a constant destabilising of truth even as it informs, but also nearly debilitating comprehension in parts - deliberately obstructive, but obstructive nevertheless. Plenty to learn here, though, and plenty of insight - no glib cultural commentary the likes of which frequently dominate essay collections.

billiamdyemyhair's review against another edition

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4.0

Maybe the lobster were the friends we made along the way.

The essays are wonderful in every way but many tend to veer off into tangents that can feel very unnecessary. Very much worth reading tho (especially Consider the Lobster, Up Simba, and Mrs. Thompson’s)