Welcome to Bookmarker!

This is a personal project by @dellsystem. I built this to help me retain information from the books I'm reading.

Source code on GitHub (MIT license).

Activity

You added a note
7 years, 6 months ago

on religion

"I'm interested in religion, only because certain churches seem to be a place where things can be talked about. What does your life mean? Do you believe in something bigger than you? Is there something about gratifying every single desire you have that is harmful? [...]"

—p.79 Conversations with David Foster Wallace The “Infinite Story” Cult Hero behind the 1,079-Page Novel Rides the Hype He Skewered (76) by David Foster Wallace
You added a note
7 years, 6 months ago

the audience is too stupid

If you, the writer, succumb to the idea that the audience is too stupid, then there are two pitfalls. Number one is the avant-garde pitfall, where you have the idea that you're writing for other writers, so you don't worry about making yourself accessible or relevant. You worry about making it stru…

—p.61 The Salon Interview: David Foster Wallace (58) by David Foster Wallace
You added a note
7 years, 6 months ago

willing to sort of die advice/writing

[...] I've found the really tricky discipline to writing is trying to play without getting overcome by insecurity or vanity or ego. Showing the reader that you're smart or funny or talented or whatever, trying to be liked, integrity issues aside, this stuff just doesn't have enough motivational cal…

—p.50 An Expanded Interview with David Foster Wallace (21) by David Foster Wallace
You added a note
7 years, 6 months ago

on rap

[...] Anyway, what rock 'n' roll did for the multicolored young back in the fifties and sixties, rap seems to be doing for the young black urban community. It's another attempt to break free of precedent and constraint. But there are contradictions in rap that seem perversely to show how, in an era…

—p.47 An Expanded Interview with David Foster Wallace (21) by David Foster Wallace
You added a note
7 years, 6 months ago

out of the rubble

[...] My idea in "Westward" was to do with metafiction what Moore's poetry or like DeLillo's Libra had done with other mediated myths. I wanted to get the Armageddon-explosion, the goal metafiction's always been about, I wanted to get it over with, and then out of the rubble reaffirm the idea of …

—p.41 An Expanded Interview with David Foster Wallace (21) by David Foster Wallace