Moonhead -> RE: Reading suggestions for my failed vacation... (12/21/2011 9:44:45 AM)
|
quote:
ORIGINAL: Snort quote:
ORIGINAL: samboct I dunno about V... I preferred Garvity's Rainbow, actually. Here is a comment about that novel: quote:
Gravity's Rainbow was a joint winner of the 1974 National Book Award for Fiction... In the same year, the fiction jury unanimously recommended Gravity's Rainbow for the Pulitzer Prize though the Pulitzer board vetoed the jury's recommendation, describing the novel as "unreadable", "turgid", "overwritten", and in parts "obscene", and no prize was awarded. With Pynchon, just let the stories flow and find delight in the crazy juxtaposition of images and stories. Consider it a non linear novel lol. There's better places to start than Gravity's Rainbow, though: I have a suspicion that one gets talked up a lot because it's the hardest novel to get through, and the litcrit massive like a bit of obscurity and hard to get posturing. V is less impressive technically, but it's a simple and linear story, and a lot easier to get through. The Crying of Lot 49 and Mason & Dixon are fine reads as well (and for my money, Mason & Dixon is a better novel than Gravity's Rainbow, though it'll probably be at least another fifteen years before the universities or the TLS 'fess up to that one.) Actually, if you're looking for an easy introduction to Pynchon, you could do a lot worse than Slow Learner, which is a wonderful short story collection...
|
|
|
|