so i started gravity's rainbow the other day

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i am so over thomas pynchon. i feel quite sad when i remember how much more of a thing thomas pynchon used to be for me. i won't lie, this is when my friends who still take drugs start talking about how much of a thing thomas pynchon is and must always be for everyone in perpetuity.

Yorkshire lass born and bred, that's me, said Katriona's hologram. (thomp), Thursday, 8 November 2012 12:32 (thirteen years ago)

I never really got over him. I reread about half of Mason & Dixon earlier this year and was rapt. Rapt. For all his faults (which have become more obvious as I've grown up), there's no living novelist I'd rather read.

woof, Thursday, 8 November 2012 12:40 (thirteen years ago)

death of the author changes everything

ut's nutta bull, ut's a *romanda* (darraghmac), Thursday, 8 November 2012 12:44 (thirteen years ago)

yeah i've reread half of mason & dixon a couple times, is the thing

Yorkshire lass born and bred, that's me, said Katriona's hologram. (thomp), Thursday, 8 November 2012 12:46 (thirteen years ago)

so over thomas pynchon

max, Thursday, 8 November 2012 12:51 (thirteen years ago)

get out

Yorkshire lass born and bred, that's me, said Katriona's hologram. (thomp), Thursday, 8 November 2012 12:52 (thirteen years ago)

The first novel I've read that has made me burst into tears for about an hour afterwards, crying for Slothrop's beautiful disintegration, for the heroic Counterforce that is the whole damn novel, for the scattered and headlong resolutions of those astonishing, damaged characters, all resolved truth by the Rocket's catharsis, for the dreams and the visions, thegenuinely Gnostic harnessing of High Math as religious conduit, for us all, and our comedy in the face of oppression...this would make for the greatest movie of course but only really if done as a ten-hour anime...fuck, this was so much of what is real to me

once a week is ample, Thursday, 8 November 2012 20:58 (thirteen years ago)

i kind of want to see it made in the style of 'inglorius basterds'

Yorkshire lass born and bred, that's me, said Katriona's hologram. (thomp), Friday, 9 November 2012 02:43 (thirteen years ago)

i mean, whatever. we all read anthony powell down here kid

Yorkshire lass born and bred, that's me, said Katriona's hologram. (thomp), Friday, 9 November 2012 02:43 (thirteen years ago)

damn, once a week, that is the most compelling 'reaction' to pynchon i've ever heard. maybe it is time to force myself to read all of this damn book.

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Friday, 9 November 2012 03:03 (thirteen years ago)

one year passes...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I-NBPpM--pY

everybody loves lana del raymond (s.clover), Tuesday, 29 July 2014 16:40 (eleven years ago)

once a week is ample still otm

one way street, Tuesday, 29 July 2014 20:28 (eleven years ago)

:)

i'm elf-ein lusophonic (imago), Tuesday, 29 July 2014 23:03 (eleven years ago)

Had I but world enough and time
I still wouldn't make it to the end of this book

Dr. Winston O'Boogie Chillen' (James Redd and the Blecchs), Wednesday, 30 July 2014 02:02 (eleven years ago)

this would make for the greatest movie of course but only really if done as a ten-hour anime

oh dearie me..

xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 30 July 2014 07:51 (eleven years ago)

Couple of days ago was @ nu-Foyles - looking for a new book (which they didn't have). There was a guy looking over which Pynchon to buy first. He had a good look at GR but went for Lot 49 instead. I felt the urge to shake him out of it, but you know..

xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 30 July 2014 07:57 (eleven years ago)

how are you finding nu-foyles xyzzzz__? haven't been in yet. but went in to the old one for the first time since I worked there in the late '90s before it moved and felt it still had the best range and depth of any bookshop in London. hoping move hasn't involved a "rationalisation".

Fizzles, Wednesday, 30 July 2014 08:27 (eleven years ago)

Fizzles its really good - actually been to the coffee shop a couple of times just to read. I think the shop is just as strong in terms of depth as the old one if not more so.

Compare to Waterstones CX where the fiction section is def slimmed down.

xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 30 July 2014 09:07 (eleven years ago)

waterstones near the university is the only great waterstones in town now, imo

The beer was cold, but so was the glass, which drives me crazy. (stevie), Wednesday, 30 July 2014 09:43 (eleven years ago)

Gower st has an ok 2nd hand section. Reminds me I should go there in August to have a look.

xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 30 July 2014 09:49 (eleven years ago)

love Gower st – the academic remainders make it for me.

tbh I think the Piccadilly branch is a great browsing bookshop – some really good tables, like the little by-publisher sections in fiction (if they're still there), so that all the NYRB or Dalkey or w/e is together. It's a bit lifestyley and Foyles has better stock for most of the things I care about but it's much improved, nice inviting version of a giant bookshop.

woof, Wednesday, 30 July 2014 10:19 (eleven years ago)

Yeah, had forgotten about the academic remainders, possibly deliberately, as the last couple of times I've been have made me frightened at what I might do when I go back. different thread really.

Gravity's Rainbow has the heft of being The Great Pynchon novel to recommend it as a first read for toe-dippers, but M&D would be my choice for ease of enjoyment.

Fizzles, Wednesday, 30 July 2014 10:30 (eleven years ago)

At this stage I'd have Against The Day only a tiny, tiny smidgen behind GR and miles ahead of anything else I've read (so take this with a pynch of salt). I think it'd make a fantastic introduction, length notwithstanding. Perhaps the way to go would be to read in chronological order of setting :D

i'm elf-ein lusophonic (imago), Wednesday, 30 July 2014 11:09 (eleven years ago)

this thread is best when people discuss bookshops, not Gravity's Rainbow.

the pinefox, Wednesday, 30 July 2014 12:50 (eleven years ago)

have started to notice that everywhere I get laid, a bookshop closes

i'm elf-ein lusophonic (imago), Wednesday, 30 July 2014 13:08 (eleven years ago)

the book depository

sʌxihɔːl (Ward Fowler), Wednesday, 30 July 2014 13:31 (eleven years ago)

two weeks pass...

Really enjoyed this review of GR by Jonathan Rosenbaum

Also there is a talk. C4 journo Paul Mason is a fan!

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 14 August 2014 11:24 (eleven years ago)

oh i'm there

rosenbaum review is brilliant. read it a while ago. discovering that my favourite movie writer was a massive pynchon fan basically made my day

i'm elf-ein lusophonic (imago), Thursday, 14 August 2014 11:40 (eleven years ago)

Mason's own novel, Rare Earth, is quite enjoyable in a sub-Pynchon way. The Pinefox and myself were talking about going to the Mason event - impromptu ILB FAP?

Stevie T, Thursday, 14 August 2014 11:42 (eleven years ago)

Looks quite good, revive the thread nearer the time...hopefully I'll be able to attend.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 14 August 2014 14:36 (eleven years ago)

I think I will go.

the pinefox, Thursday, 14 August 2014 20:58 (eleven years ago)

couldn't find my copy and was thinking about rereading so bought my third copy in 10 years, a $2 used paperback from 1974, and lol @ its flimsy spine being totally pristine: not once in forty years has this book been read

difficult listening hour, Friday, 22 August 2014 20:15 (eleven years ago)

i feel silly when i think about how many times i've started and abandoned this book. probably at least 10. then again i had a similar experience with moby-dick and when i finally did buckle down and read it it became my favorite book in the world for a couple years.

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Friday, 22 August 2014 22:30 (eleven years ago)

imo you're better off reading ATD or M&D or Vineland

sleeve, Friday, 22 August 2014 22:55 (eleven years ago)

ATD is p much just as good, M&D great but slightly less great, Vineland IDK, need to read

I'm going to that Paul Mason thing, ticket confirmed. Expect to see London ILX there in force

imago, Saturday, 23 August 2014 07:58 (eleven years ago)

I've attempted to listen to this on audiobook for the sake of speed. Not sure if I'm taking any of it in though.

Scary Darey (dog latin), Saturday, 23 August 2014 12:03 (eleven years ago)

I gotta say, Paul Morley on Nabokov looks way more like the keeper there

♛ LIL UNIT ♛ (thomp), Saturday, 23 August 2014 15:04 (eleven years ago)

Never really got into this guy, as noted upthread, but am in a contrary mood so maybe it's time to give him another try.

Dear Ultraviolet Catastrophe Waitress (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 24 August 2014 00:50 (eleven years ago)

I think Vineland is an entry point if you like something more grounded (bit of a political novel, written (one assumes) around the Reagan years). Also mid-length to the bulky novels. This was a good piece on it:

http://www.theguardian.com/books/2010/jul/31/thomas-pynchon-vineland-rereading

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 24 August 2014 07:51 (eleven years ago)

Thanks. Either that or Inherent Vice, which that article describes as a prequel of sorts.

Dear Ultraviolet Catastrophe Waitress (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 24 August 2014 18:59 (eleven years ago)

Well, it takes place in California as well, and deals with post-hippes. But in that case, Crying of Lot 49 is really the start of a 'California-trilogy' of sorts.

Frederik B, Sunday, 24 August 2014 19:09 (eleven years ago)

update: the front cover came off around page 150

then again i had a similar experience with moby-dick and when i finally did buckle down and read it it became my favorite book in the world for a couple years.

slothrop's disintegration always reminds me of ishmael's weird fade into invisible omniscience, altho it's not as formally adventurous tbh (and ishmael finds himself again on the other side, to tell the tale)

difficult listening hour, Monday, 25 August 2014 06:33 (eleven years ago)

(, escaped alone to tell thee), rather, idk what children's-illustrated-classics version i was remembering there

difficult listening hour, Monday, 25 August 2014 06:36 (eleven years ago)

two weeks pass...

http://quarterlyconversation.com/now-playing-at-pynchon-cinemas-whats-going-on-in-pynchons-three-california-novels

^this is is another good piece I came across yesterday - certainly reading GR (and so much Pynchon) as the channel hopper that it is (and now things are evem more like that) is somewhat useful. Spends a lot of time on it, even though it isn't strictly a California novel.

xyzzzz__, Tuesday, 9 September 2014 08:43 (eleven years ago)

two weeks pass...

talk was good fun. meeting fizzles, pinefox, stevie tunn was gr8. so so drunk now after a party and on a night bus. anathema on headphones. sudden sense of ending. maybe join in the riotous conversation around me? pynchon finds salvation in chaos maybe

pretentious over rated bloody old rubbish (imago), Saturday, 27 September 2014 03:02 (eleven years ago)

pretentious over rated bloody old rubbish!

the pinefox, Saturday, 27 September 2014 10:27 (eleven years ago)

Paul Mason was great: so impressive always
Anne Enright I thought thought it was more about her than it was
I still hate GR but impressed by PM's ability to summarize it

Impressed by Imago (?!)'s account of his creative teaching methods at his college.
Thanks for the good friendly vibes last night Imago.
Fizzles, FAP some time?

Later Stevie the Nipper and I met up with someone who was taught by DFW!

the pinefox, Saturday, 27 September 2014 10:29 (eleven years ago)

yes, this was great! Really like Paul Mason - came out of that wishing there were more prominent, strong, intelligent, anti-establishment voices like this available on TV.

He rehearses and articulates arguments that seem to me absent from TV generally, and perhaps more widely, which in itself results in the impoverishment of public political discourse.

More specifically to the evening, once Ann Enright and Paul M had worked out who was interviewing who, it was very enjoyable. I don't think anything staggeringly new was said about GR - and the point that the below-zero nature of Slothrop's deconditioning means that each piece of V2 desctruction is also a life and love giving action in the darkness could have been made earlier.

However, it was interesting to hear P Mason speak about how the book fit into his high establishment conspiracy of power v hidden resistance model of late 20th C early 21st C world affairs, both existing in the shadows.

Some good questions (inluding imago's - I did feel he kind of pushed the burlesque aspect of Pynchon too far to one side, which was interesting in itself).

Good to see everyone as well - yes pinefox, a FAP would be good!

Fizzles, Monday, 29 September 2014 10:14 (eleven years ago)

eleven months pass...

Anyone seen this?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pr%C3%BCfstand_VII

xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 16 September 2015 21:23 (ten years ago)

four months pass...

No gamer but this headline caught my eye.

http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2016/jan/27/jonathan-blow-designer-video-games-braid-the-witness

xyzzzz__, Wednesday, 27 January 2016 17:02 (ten years ago)


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