I didn't really want to start his thread because I didn't want to expend any effort beyond
hey, has anyone been reading this book besides me?
but after posting a few of my thoughts about it on the Best Opening Line thread, I almost needed to know
hey, has anyone been reading this book besides me?
Personally, I feel it's the most accessable of Pynchon's major novels (more managable amount of characters, for starters), and it would seem to be a lock amongst posters on a comic book site as it features some very pulp characters in the Chums of Chance as well as one of history's great mysteries in the Tunguska Blast. (Granted, I read Vertigo comics.) It's Pynchon, so it's got the density and the sense of humor (finally, the true origin of Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer-- take that, Mark Waid), but once you get passed those cork-screw, endless sentences, it's almost a page-turner. And the time period involved-- the late 19th century through WWI-- seems so short-shifted in recent literature compared to the build-up to WWII (let alone the actual war!), despite the fact that it informs so many of the world's current conflicts.
I highly recommend it, although if you already dislike Pynchon, I doubt you'll be won over. (Fence-straddlers might come over to the right side, however.)
Looking foward to any discussion that might develop.:o
(Which is a weak way of saying that I'm too tired to write a good post to foster discussion.)


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