The Crying of Lot 49

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the ideas still overtake the ppl. in lot 49

You say this as though it's a bad thing. I'm not so sure, esp. wrt the novella.

vineland is desparately underrated, but I'm stumped by your impression that it's "almost pure character." I suspect I'm tripping on a terminology issue here.

rogermexico (rogermexico), Thursday, 27 October 2005 16:08 (eighteen years ago) link

I like the secret integration, too. I like Pynchon when he is... sentimental?

CL49 is probably the book I have recommended to most people. I can't see how anyone could find nothing or little there, anyone.

Gravel Puzzleworth (Gregory Henry), Thursday, 27 October 2005 16:32 (eighteen years ago) link

i haven't read vineland in years, but from what i remember it's the slapstick pynchon gone wild. the scene i recall is the lawncare man singing his company's jingle to the tune of the marseillaise ("a lawn savant who'll lop a tree-uh").

lauren (laurenp), Thursday, 27 October 2005 16:54 (eighteen years ago) link

I think I agree with lauren's first post. & TP always comes across as a bit . . . lame, y'know? "tweedy man's Dick", &c.
It's sort've the equiv of Less Than Zero - harmless. tho I've just picked up M&D, which might alter my thinking.

etc, Thursday, 27 October 2005 20:42 (eighteen years ago) link

I doubt much could alter your mind, etc.

Jerry the Nipper (Jerrynipper), Thursday, 27 October 2005 20:56 (eighteen years ago) link

i just meant that the first time i read col49 i didn't get lots of the jokes at all, and the whole jacobin revenge drama bit rilly only makes sense if you get the degree to which this is a spot-on parody of real stuff.

i don't see how vineland is pure shtick at all. there are lots of set pieces, sure, but it is totally sentimental at heart. like truly adorable. the shticks are all so loveable too.

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Friday, 28 October 2005 03:47 (eighteen years ago) link

'his batman, a Corporal Wayne' = lame and fantastic at the same time

Josh (Josh), Friday, 28 October 2005 04:00 (eighteen years ago) link

That line's OK, probably.

I don't know what 'Tweedy man's Dick' means.

I don't think TP is like Less Than Zero. I think he is very different!

I don't think that one needs to have read a load of C17 drama to be delighted by The Courier's Tragedy. I think that in such instances , one somewhat constructs the context from the text - a process which is probably fundamental and pervasive but little remarked upon (but which should not be an excuse for bad and obscure writing; it just strikes me that in this case you create your sense of C17 drama on the basis of TP's parody, as much as the reverse; and I think the result is terrific).

the pinefox, Friday, 28 October 2005 12:08 (eighteen years ago) link

jacobin =/= Jacobean

"tweedy man's Dick" = I like imaginative fiction but Pynchon baffles and intimidates me

Far from schtick gone wild, Vineland is an angry, mordant, and prescient assessment of the Love Generation's death drive. If often hilarious.

Mason and Dixon is a virtuoso piece, but also plotless and the last thing I would choose to change anyone's mind about Pynchon.

Should we revive a Pynchon thread for this side stuff and return to Lot 49?

rogermexico (rogermexico), Saturday, 29 October 2005 00:19 (eighteen years ago) link

Returning to Lot 49 is always worthwhile.

We should really get to 49 posts.

the pinefox, Monday, 31 October 2005 14:13 (eighteen years ago) link

I don't feel like rereading it, so much.

Casuistry (Chris P), Tuesday, 1 November 2005 03:41 (eighteen years ago) link

i bought myself another copy today cos i couldn't find my old one. i think i'll reread it tonight to see if i still like pynchon.

J.D. (Justyn Dillingham), Tuesday, 1 November 2005 20:38 (eighteen years ago) link

I tried to get it from the library. No luck.

PJ Miller (PJ Miller 68), Wednesday, 2 November 2005 08:51 (eighteen years ago) link

one month passes...
i think that that first sentence - just the first clause of it, really - sets up most everything i dislike about '49. Tupperware as a sort of shorthand for 'suburban conformity', and pynchon only remembering that oedipa is tarred with this once or twice in the book: "but metzger! i'm a republican!" etc. -

my professor was making a big deal of talking about signifiers & such during the class, and i kept rolling my eyes. weirdly lots in 49 seems like pomo-critic-bait: driblette's whine "why is everyone so interested in texts?" makes me stop and larf, altho i'm kinda fuzzy as to whether 'texts' had its sense of academic double-meaning in '64, for '49. the book josh mentions - 'lines of flight' - make a lot of the breaking of the frame in the varo triptich, which is kinda interesting. i dunno what the hell to do with this book: reading it as 'exemplary postmodernism' or whatever is a boring dead end, but reading it as a secret-depths-behind-apple-pie-america is just sad. both of these make one hell of a period piece out of it.

(the only way to break the frame of the novel i can see is with its links on either side, to V. and to GR, and maybe from there to something of actual real-world use)

(of course actually reading it, rather than trying to, i guess, take something from it, it somewhat great.)

tom west (thomp), Saturday, 3 December 2005 02:35 (eighteen years ago) link

i don't know what happened to that last sentence. i suppose for purposes of actually reading for enjoyment it works, as opposed for reading with the notion in mind that somehow we might benefit from the reading of this book.

the ending of chapter two is the section i am most curious about, for some reason.

tom west (thomp), Saturday, 3 December 2005 02:37 (eighteen years ago) link

is 'entertainment' or or or even 'art' not an option?

enjoyment is a benefit, isn't it? i don't mean that in the trivial sense either.

Josh (Josh), Saturday, 3 December 2005 03:12 (eighteen years ago) link

on reflection i prefer that sentence without naming 'enjoyment', it is more the good kind of gnomic.

you may be right. (i'm not sure my distrust of this book isn't a dislike of a couple general things external to this book, which conflicts with my ability to enjoy the book qua book) (not that this isn't the kind of process involved in interfacing with any kinda entertainartment ever, obviously)

i do like that lines of flight book, despite not being able to follow any of the delueze/guattari* stuff: particularly the fact that it tries to follow "counterculture politics" as a theme through GR is something i am glad of. however i have had to return it to the library after little more than a couple glances at it. oh, hey, d'you have the pynchon notes back issues link to hand?

*how do you pronounce these people, by the way? i have been wondering since more or less forever

tom west (thomp), Saturday, 3 December 2005 03:33 (eighteen years ago) link

I've always heard them to rhyme with Toulouse and Atari.

Casuistry (Chris P), Saturday, 3 December 2005 04:06 (eighteen years ago) link

well i was hoping 'atari' was an incorrect rhyme so to lend my as yet unrecorded 'The 80s (Green Gartside Song)' the correct poignancy

tom west (thomp), Saturday, 3 December 2005 04:12 (eighteen years ago) link

http://www2.ham.muohio.edu/~krafftjm/backissu.html

i have a search function, you know

Josh (Josh), Saturday, 3 December 2005 06:07 (eighteen years ago) link

Wait, there are TWO Crying Of Lot 49 threads?

k/l (Ken L), Sunday, 4 December 2005 00:12 (eighteen years ago) link

If you don't count the secret ones, yes.

Casuistry (Chris P), Sunday, 4 December 2005 00:32 (eighteen years ago) link

I bought this today, and have Moby Dick on pause for a few.

Jaq (Jaq), Sunday, 4 December 2005 02:57 (eighteen years ago) link

I don't, of course, share Tom West's view. Perhaps I feel that he is agonizing far too much over what is a rich pleasure. Yet that ('agonizing'?) still sounds imprecise or cliched. I suppose I mean that he is creating problems that need not be there, then worrying about them.

the bellefox, Monday, 5 December 2005 15:58 (eighteen years ago) link

well it's not like i've anything better to do

& oh hey thanx josh

tom west (thomp), Monday, 5 December 2005 17:52 (eighteen years ago) link

fwiw i think mr. fox = right: My Issues With Pynchon are really just the fallout of discovering him age sixteen and falling vastly in love with this whole cosmos of stuff i maybe one-third could follow (i.e. jokes about stockhausen).

tom west (thomp), Monday, 5 December 2005 18:00 (eighteen years ago) link

that i.e. should be an e.g., and i should make my posts one post long and not three, sorry.

tom west (thomp), Monday, 5 December 2005 18:01 (eighteen years ago) link

Are there other books, like The Crying Of Lot 49? I mean that naively - I'd like to read them!

Gravel Puzzleworth (Gregory Henry), Monday, 5 December 2005 20:46 (eighteen years ago) link

i suppose you could make a case for 'foucault's pendulum'

tom west (thomp), Monday, 5 December 2005 21:22 (eighteen years ago) link

Putting Moby-Dick on pause seems like a bad idea.

Casuistry (Chris P), Monday, 5 December 2005 22:26 (eighteen years ago) link

I fell asleep 4 pages from the end of TCOL49 tonight. Too many early mornings working this past week (and this morning too). Or something. This is a book for thinking on. It felt complete, whereas GR did not, to me.

Moby-Dick is back on play. The below-decks stowaways have appeared, to the consternation of many of the crew, and it is the first lowering. There is a reference to samphire, Casuistry. In chapter 46, I think.

Jaq (Jaq), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 04:39 (eighteen years ago) link

Jaq reads great books!

the bellefox, Tuesday, 6 December 2005 21:32 (eighteen years ago) link

this is what happens when engineers who should have been english majors feel their mortality....

Jaq (Jaq), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 22:50 (eighteen years ago) link

i noticed on the lifter puller thread that craig finn cites this book as an influence, huh

tom west (thomp), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 23:06 (eighteen years ago) link

i finally finished my last reread after putting off chapter six, which does make a bit more of oedipa than the others. i can't help but think the ending is an unfortunate and unhelpful reduction to binaries, tho. (which i find redeemed by g.r., really.) (the oedipa stuff will require a focussed reread to make any sense of to myself, never mind anyone else. but i think possibly the ending of part two is v important viz pynchon's caricature of her.) (is the feminist filmmaker's confession of lust for the g-man in 'vineland' tragic or just tragically white-male-novelist, sort of thing.)

tom west (thomp), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 23:15 (eighteen years ago) link

okay for "tragic" read "angry, mordant, and prescient assessment of the Love Generation's death drive" q.v. rogermexico upthread

we are past forty-nine posts, and no one has made note of this yet.

tom west (thomp), Tuesday, 6 December 2005 23:17 (eighteen years ago) link

two months pass...
If you were to ever look at the names of the character's you may find that the names itself is a satire just like the book itself. For example, Oedipa Maas, sounds just like Oedpida My Ass. And Mucho Mass could very well be A Lot My Ass. I know it may seem irrelevent, but think about this....the sounds of their names also ties into their overall character.

Also, did you notice that the radio station that Much works at is "FUCK" backwards. This very much shows the sense of humor that Pynchon has and his ability to not take things so seriously.

Now while this has no immediate analysis on the book, I just find them interest tid-bits.

Guadeleupe, Monday, 6 February 2006 16:38 (eighteen years ago) link

That all seems way too convenient to be true.

Casuistry (Chris P), Tuesday, 7 February 2006 03:31 (eighteen years ago) link

there is a relevant passage in someone somewhere that i can't quote right now. on the importance of names in satire. really.

Josh (Josh), Tuesday, 7 February 2006 04:43 (eighteen years ago) link

all those convenient tidbits are prolly somewhat true, Pynchon seems to come from the Joycian vein of writers where nothing gets by them without them knowing and personally placing it there
also the archtectural backround may add to his intricate allusions and word plays, comeon an early draft of Gravity's Rainbow was written on the blue architect paper

i could be wrong tho

J. Lamphere (WatchMeJumpStart), Tuesday, 7 February 2006 06:58 (eighteen years ago) link

Oh, come on, if we were supposed to recognize that KCUF was "FUCK" backwards, surely Pynchon would have made it a little more obvious, maybe by having one of the characters notice it or something. Otherwise, how are we supposed to know? Are we mind readers?

Casuistry (Chris P), Tuesday, 7 February 2006 11:14 (eighteen years ago) link

tyrone slothrop is an anagram of "the butler did it"

tom west (thomp), Tuesday, 7 February 2006 11:26 (eighteen years ago) link

why else would he pick those letters and put them in that exact order? It could be a just a fluke, but I personally don't think so. What else would they stand for then?

J. Lamphere (WatchMeJumpStart), Tuesday, 7 February 2006 15:59 (eighteen years ago) link

the length and density of the book, and the numerous allusions within, make me think that KCUF/FUCK was intentional (not that auctorial intention is the most interesting thing to talk about, or can ever be absolutely determined from the text).

the prof in my last English class brought up "Oedipa my ass," for what that's worth.

W i l l (common_person), Tuesday, 7 February 2006 18:35 (eighteen years ago) link

chris you must be 'taking the piss' ahem.

who would NOT notice?

or is it wrong of me to assume that everyone was once an adolescent?

Josh (Josh), Wednesday, 8 February 2006 02:04 (eighteen years ago) link

[distinct sound of chain being jerked here]

Jaq (Jaq), Wednesday, 8 February 2006 02:30 (eighteen years ago) link

the thread reviver read the book! or parts of it!! is there no decency any more?!?

Josh (Josh), Wednesday, 8 February 2006 03:50 (eighteen years ago) link

"Maas" is more likely like the Spanish word "mas" meaning more. So, Mucho Maas is a lot more, or more than a lot.

mike h. (mike h.), Friday, 10 February 2006 23:22 (eighteen years ago) link

That is, I've always pronounced "Maas" like mahss, not like mass.

mike h. (mike h.), Friday, 10 February 2006 23:23 (eighteen years ago) link

three months pass...
You know, I was watching 'The Big Sleep' again last night and I was moved to wonder whether the name "Oedipa Maas" (for which I have never read an entirely satisfactory explanation) might in fact be an homage/allusion to the rather odd character Eddie Mars. It would certainly be in keeping with the book's more general play with the form of LA noir...

Jerry the Nipper (Jerrynipper), Tuesday, 30 May 2006 10:08 (seventeen years ago) link

Fab wide-eyed past-tense plot summary:
http://www.gradesaver.com/classicnotes/titles/crying/section6.html

Driving without purpose, Oedipa realized that she was heading toward San Francisco in rush hour. Strangely, the hectic rush calmed her. She told herself that she would go with the flow in San Francisco, looking for nothing, and hopefully escape from the maze in which she was entangled.

However, within an hour, Oedipa saw a muted post horn. Walking along the streets, Arnold Snarb, a tourist, had pinned his ID badge on Oedipa. She was suddenly among a group of tourists who moved into a gay bar, The Greek Way. Oedipa was pushed in and given a drink. The man she stood next to had on a different badge, one with the muted post horn symbol. Oedipa tried mentioning that she was from Thurn and Taxis but the man did not understand. She directly asked about his pin but he told her nothing until Oedipa admitted that she needed help. She told him everything she knew. He had heard only of Kirby, the code name from the Scope's bathroom wall. He told Oedipa that his pin meant he was a member of Inamorati Anonymous, an organization for isolated individuals against love. The symbol originated with a fired member of Yoyodyne who had wanted to kill himself but could not decide to do it for weeks. He received a stack of letters from others who wanted to commit suicide but never did in response to an ad he placed. All contained the muted horn on the stamp. The man realized this in an attempt to douse himself with gas and burn to death. At that time, he recognized that love was his weakness and that he would start an organization for others who wished to isolate themselves from it. The horn became the sign.

After the helpful man left, Oedipa felt drunk and alone. The rest of the night, she wandered the streets of San Francisco, locating the Tristero symbol everywhere. She saw it in chalk on the street, like part of a children's game, and on a Chinese herbalist's window. She felt that she was meant to see and remember every sign. She was safe. In Golden Gate Park, she saw a circle of children who knew of the chalk game. Oedipa wandered into a Mexican diner and found Jesús Arrabal, an anarchist she and Pierce had met in Mazatlán. Jesús had been amazed by Pierce's total oligarchism. Lying near him was an old anarchist paper with an handstruck image of the post horn. Jesús could tell her nothing about it. On a bus, Oedipa noticed a scratched image of the post horn on the back of a seat with "DEATH" penciled near it, standing for "Don't ever antagonize the horn." She found the symbol in a laundromat and she heard a mother at the airport asking her son to write by WASTE. Each sign beat her up more than the last. She would later wonder how many times she had dreamt the horn. It seemed that every underground used WASTE to subvert the government.

the pinefox, Monday, 27 October 2008 10:21 (fifteen years ago) link

four years pass...

just finished it. decent warm-up lap for what was to come. has several inspired passages (the suicide-gasoline-inamorati story, the movie/seduction/stripping-game scene and of course The Courier's Tragedy are stunning set-pieces, among others) and reads very smoothly. held my interest.

whoever says it's his best book is either a certified nutjob or intensely lazy, or at least needs to give me a seriously goddamn impressive explanation

ghosts of cuddlestein butthurt circlejerk zinged fuckboy (imago), Thursday, 20 June 2013 00:15 (ten years ago) link

its his best book that i've finished, tho ive read the first six pages of gravity's rainbow about 40 times

should we bin tapping? (darraghmac), Thursday, 20 June 2013 00:26 (ten years ago) link

gravity's rainbow is the guru granth sahib of my own personal religion and yes it's hard to get beyond the first 10 pages, took me about 5 years - this is the challenge of it

against the day is also much better than TCOL49 (hell, just the chapter where cyprian becomes a bride of the night is better than TCOL49), as is what I've read of mason & dixon

pynchon is still obviously the greatest

ghosts of cuddlestein butthurt circlejerk zinged fuckboy (imago), Thursday, 20 June 2013 00:30 (ten years ago) link

no tolkien, wash out your mouth

should we bin tapping? (darraghmac), Thursday, 20 June 2013 00:33 (ten years ago) link

anyway im more than happy that i've read the two big flann o'brien novels so far this summer after years on the shelf

should we bin tapping? (darraghmac), Thursday, 20 June 2013 00:33 (ten years ago) link

i might reread this

the bitcoin comic (thomp), Thursday, 20 June 2013 01:15 (ten years ago) link

fuck me, i don't have a copy of this. how is that even possible

the bitcoin comic (thomp), Thursday, 20 June 2013 01:16 (ten years ago) link

set undergrad text, they're cheap to re-get

j., Thursday, 20 June 2013 01:34 (ten years ago) link

i think i got rid of my first copy because i decided i liked the new cover but then i got rid of my new copy because i decided i didn't after all

the bitcoin comic (thomp), Thursday, 20 June 2013 01:51 (ten years ago) link

thats the way to judge a book eh

should we bin tapping? (darraghmac), Thursday, 20 June 2013 01:55 (ten years ago) link

hardcore pynchonites' contempt for this book is kinda hilarious

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Thursday, 20 June 2013 07:01 (ten years ago) link

i like it because of the swinging '60s vibe and because i kinda relate to oedipa. surely everyone will at least concede it's better than 'v' (which i find completely unreadable), right?

(The Other) J.D. (J.D.), Thursday, 20 June 2013 07:05 (ten years ago) link

No arguments from me, although the truth be told I didn't like crying that much either but it was at least shorter. There was a thread recently about not liking or not finishing books and I resisted the temptation to post about how I stopped reading V with about about five pages left. Reason I stopped was because I figured he wasn't going to explain anything anyway- please don't tell me otherwise-reason I didn't post was because it sort of felt like humblebragging, but I have no such scruple today. Still like that other crying thread.

Pastel City Slang (James Redd and the Blecchs), Thursday, 20 June 2013 11:11 (ten years ago) link

V has its moments and is obviously a harbinger of greater things to come but I don't think back on reading it with much fondness.

Lot 49 is a great novel and I get the feeling people underrate it because its short and relatively zippy, but there's a hell lot going on in there and it feels particularly relevant right now. I would rate it above AtD and on a par with GR (which is unstoppable for its first half but sags in the second half).

Matt DC, Thursday, 20 June 2013 11:17 (ten years ago) link

Think ppl underrate Crying in part because Pynchon himself dismisses it in the introduction to Slow Learner

Ward Fowler, Thursday, 20 June 2013 11:20 (ten years ago) link

i've only laid out a lazy position above in response to lj, so i should state that reading crying in one feverish night sitting was one of the most intense and visceral trips of my life, it is imo a great work regardless of before, after or comparisons

should we bin tapping? (darraghmac), Thursday, 20 June 2013 11:23 (ten years ago) link

I *do* think that TCOL49 would make a HELL of a movie, possibly by Linklater in his rotoscoped A Scanner Darkly mould

ghosts of cuddlestein butthurt circlejerk zinged fuckboy (imago), Thursday, 20 June 2013 11:32 (ten years ago) link

also, Gravity's Rainbow sags in its second half? dios mio

ghosts of cuddlestein butthurt circlejerk zinged fuckboy (imago), Thursday, 20 June 2013 11:34 (ten years ago) link

FWIW I think all the big Pynchons have a bit of a dip around 3/4 of the way in and then recover at the end, although none as pronounced as AtD. The section with all the rich kids shagging their way round the Balkans is eminently forgettable.

Matt DC, Thursday, 20 June 2013 11:39 (ten years ago) link

that's...the best bit*

*the best bit not involving the Chums obv, or the murder of the Italian anarchist, which is one of the best bits in Pynchon (of the 3 1/2 I've read)

AtD only loses me at all with the weird detective potboiler near the end, and even that's kinda fitting as way of uh disappearing Deuce. The Frank Traverse plotline kept threatening to lose me and then kept winning me around, especially him seeing that statue through the window (again, one of the best bits in Pynchon)

ghosts of cuddlestein butthurt circlejerk zinged fuckboy (imago), Thursday, 20 June 2013 11:45 (ten years ago) link

lol that post 'it's the best bit except this and this and this'

their climactic journey into the East is really amazing IMO

ghosts of cuddlestein butthurt circlejerk zinged fuckboy (imago), Thursday, 20 June 2013 11:46 (ten years ago) link

five years pass...

https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/07/world/europe/princess-gloria-von-thurn-und-taxis-francis.html

Princess Gloria — once christened “Princess TNT” for her explosive years as a hard partying, art-collecting, punk-haired aristocrat — has grown into the sun queen around which many traditionalist Roman Catholics opposed to Pope Francis orbit. Her Regensburg castle is a potential “Gladiator School” for conservative Catholics on a crusade to preserve church traditions.

Her Roman palace overlooking the ancient forum is a preferred salon for opposition cardinals, bitter bishops and populists like Stephen K. Bannon. Many of them are hoping to use the sex abuse crisis that amounts to the greatest existential threat to the church in centuries to topple the 81-year-old pontiff, who they are convinced is destroying the faith.

j., Saturday, 8 December 2018 09:15 (five years ago) link


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