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August.
I’ve been enjoying the new Thomas Pynchon novel, Inherent Vice. The most striking thing about is that if you had handed me the first 30 pages, I would have staked my life I was reading the opening of the new Elmore Leonard.
The lean, witty lines recounting the exploits of hippy private dick Doc Sportello in Sixties LA (albeit with a nod to Raymond Chandler) absolutely smacks of Leonard and his humorous imagination (how about a crooked Jewish property developer with Nazi biker bodyguards?).
In some ways it’s a surprise to see Pynchon, one of the most sophisticated, high-caste and demanding of American writers, dancing naked; on the other hand it isn’t, because there’s something about the crime novel, the thriller, hardboiled noir , whatever you want to call it that literary novelists find fascinating and often irresistible.
And he namedrops Sandor Marai, too. Urge to read rising.
Either way, they'll call it paranoia. They.
For there either was some Tristero beyond the appearance of the legacy America, or there was just America and if there was just America then it seemed the only way she could continue, and manage to be at all relevant to it, was an alien, unfurrowed, assumed full circle into some paranoia.
And it stops right before the supposed revelation, leaves you hanging, wanting both more and less of this glorious, bewildering, hilarious madness."Nearly three weeks it takes him," marvelled the efficiency expert, "to decide. You know how long it would've taken the IBM 7094? Twelve microseconds. No wonder you were replaced."
Suffice it to say that an uncomplimentary review by me of Lot 49 brought me the only poison-pen PM that I have ever received on any forum. :
And the reviews for Inherent Vice start dropping in.
the Literary Saloon at the complete review - 21 - 27 July 2009 Archive
Nope, still not any less excited about it.
I certainly have no interest in a "war". I would hope most of us are mature enough to be able to at least correctly quote what others have said about a book. So if you have any dissenting reviews apart from the ones in my link, I'd love to read them. :flowers:There were other comments I had in mind, but I'll forego detailing them here, not wanting to start a full-scale war with afficianodos.
Right on top as soon as it comes out, which should be in just over a week or so.Out of curiosity, where is this sitting on your TBR pile?
I browsed this thread (interesting!) and find no traces of your review?
It was on another forum?
I didn't mean you specifically BG. I have found there are others who are passionate about Pynchon as well.I certainly have no interest in a "war"
I would hope most of us are mature enough to be able to at least correctly quote what others have said about a book. So if you have any dissenting reviews apart from the ones in my link, I'd love to read them. :flowers: