AboveTopSecret.com Video and Media Portal.Books, posters, and more.T-shirts, mouse pads, cups, and bags.Member podcasts.Conspiracy theory wiki.Alternative news headlinesBelowTopSecret.com - off topic and general chit chat.AboveTopSecret.com - conspiracy theories and


 

 

This topic is in the Literature discussion forum.  (rss)


Thomas Pynchon the Great




Topic started on 21-2-2008 @ 06:39 PM by The_Modulus


I have recently been introduced to the vast, extensive, dense, lengthy and ultimately rewarding genius that is Thomas Pynchon. He is widely regarded as THE great living author and has produced the greatest compositions of words I have yet encountered.

I would like to invite anyone to discuss the works of this great author and the ways in which he has affected them. Personally, after having read some of his works, my vision upon the world has become increasingly sweeter.

I highly, highly, highly recommend his works to everyone! A good starting point would be Mason & Dixon, a sci-fantasy non-fiction that reads like a poem, a rather long one at that.



   copyright & usage 
Click here for more Literature topics
Hot Topics   |   Top Topics   |   This Week   |   Subscribe   |   Home


reply posted on 22-12-2008 @ 05:13 PM by TasteTheMagick


Wow, a fresh mind comes to Pynchon and doesn't hate it! My first was "Against the Day" and I read it in my Junior year of high school so my friend in college wouldn't have someone to run ideas off of. He hated the book but I absolutely LOVED it.



   copyright & usage 


reply posted on 23-12-2008 @ 06:03 AM by karl 12


reply to post by The_Modulus



Have been looking to give 'Against the day' a good read.
Is now on the Christmas list



   copyright & usage 


reply posted on 23-12-2008 @ 12:13 PM by dr_strangecraft


The only pynchon I've read was gravity's rainbow; but I've read it multiple times.

I have enjoyed comparing it with Joyce's Finnegan's Wake

I have a copy of the latter that I've been annotating on and off or over a decade. The particular interpretations of it that fascinated me are the "fly fishing" angle versus the alchemical interpretation.

I mention it because I believe Pynchon consciously copied the four-fold layout, the focus on seasons, and the contrasting viewpoints of the actors in a way intended to point to specific passages in the earlier work. If so, then pynchon must have a favored interpretation, and I want to discover what it is.

.



   copyright & usage 
AboveTopSecret.com is advertising supported.


reply posted on 25-12-2008 @ 02:11 PM by TasteTheMagick


I like Gravity's Rainbow a lot too. One of those books that really encompassed me completely. Finnegan's Wake is something I also love to read along with it. I've done it a couple times but people think I'm crazy.



   copyright & usage 





















































ATS Server: www3.theabovenetwork.com
Powered by AboveTop:Board v2.3
Header data processed in 0.002 seconds
Page processed in 0.019 seconds
6 total database queries (1)

(:)








The Below Top Secret General Discussion Web site is a wholly owned social content community of The Above Network, LLC.

This content community relies on user-generated content from our member contributors.
The opinions of our members are not those of site ownershipwho maintains
strict editorial agnosticism and simply provides a collaborative venue for free expression.






It looks like you're using some kind of software designed to block advertising while surfing our site.

We work very hard to provide an efficient Internet presence that services over 200,000 daily visits from people and automated web spiders. A large web site like this, that can handle that amount of traffic, is increasingly expensive to operate. Our only viable source of revenue (for now) are the ads displayed on each page.

If you enjoy our content, please enable our domain in your ad-blocking package.

more information       contact us

[hide this message]