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Pynchon: He Who Lives By the List, Dies by It

Submitted by jack roberts, Nov 16, 2006 07:54

Not having yet seen or read Mr. Pynchon's new novel, I read Mr. Kirsch's review of Against the Day with great interest. And though I will have to read the novel before I can judge whether Mr. Kirsch's estimate is sound, I must confess that his remark about complexity and syntax makes me doubt Mr. Kirsch's reading or his judgment, perhaps both. Few I think will agree with him about Mr. Pynchon's sentences. For the complexity, suppleness, power, and beauty of his syntax, Mr. Pynchon stands in the company of Melville, Faulkner, and perhaps Henry James, on James's best days, and very few others. I suspect that most poets, including Mr. Kirsch, would probably feel very lucky indesd if they could capture in their lines anything near the rhythmic power and lyricism of the following sentence from V.:

"If a season like the Great Rebellion ever came to him again, he feared, it could never be in that same personal, random array of picaresque acts he was to recall and celebrate in later years at best furious and nostalgic; but rather with a logic that chilled the comfortable perversity of the heart, that substituted capability for character, deliberate scheme for political epiphany (so incomparably African); and for Sarah, the sjambok, the dances of death between Warmbad and Keetmanshoop, the taut haunches of his Firelily, the black corpse impaled on a thorn tree in a river swollen with sudden rain, for these the dearest canvases in his soul's gallery, it was to substitute the bleak, abstracted and for him rather meaningless hanging on which he now turned his back, but which was to backdrop his retreat until he reached the Other Wall, the engineering design for a world he knew with numb leeriness nothing could now keep from becoming reality, a world whose full despair he, at the vantage of eighteen years later, couldn't even find adequate parables for, but a design whose first fumbling sketches he thought must have been done the year after Jacob Marengo died, on that terrible coast, where the beach between Luderitzbucht and the cemetery was actually littered each morning with a score of identical female corpses, an agglomeration no more substantial-looking than seaweed against the unhealthy yellow sand; where the soul's passage was more a mass migration across that choppy fetch of Atlantic the wind never left alone, from an island of low cloud, like an anchored prison ship, to simple integration with the unimaginable mass of their continent; where the single line of track still edged toward a Keetmanshoop that could in no conceivable iconology be any part of the Kingdom of Death; where, finally, humanity was reduced, out of a necessity which in his loonier moments he could almost believe was only Deutsch-Sudwestafrika's (actually he knew better), out of a confrontation the young of one's contemporaries, God help them, had yet to make, humanity was reduced to a nervous, disquieted, forever inadequate but indissoluble Popular Front against deceptively unpolitical and apparently minor enemies, enemies that would be with him to the grave: a sun with no shape, a beach alien as the moon's antarctic, restless concubines in barbed wire, salt mists, alkaline earth, the Benguela Current that would never cease bringing sand to raise the harbor floor, the inertia of rock, the frailty of flesh, the structural unreliability of thorns; the unheard whimper of a dying woman; the frightening but necessary cry of the strand wolf in the fog."


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I read some passages from "Gravity's Rainbow" in 2002-2003. I couldn't get through all of it.So I'm going to read... [MORE]

Raymond Tiglao Galang

Dec 30, 2007 01:36

I picked up "Gravity's Rainbow" in 2002 or 2003 after years of having ignored an attempt to read it. I... [MORE]

Raymond

Dec 30, 2007 01:29

"The silliness of 'Against the Day' about the very subjects where we are most urgently in quest of wisdom proves... [MORE]

Steven Augustine

Nov 26, 2006 16:27

Not having yet seen or read Mr. Pynchon's new novel, I read Mr. Kirsch's review of Against the Day with...

jack roberts

Nov 16, 2006 07:54

The Thomas Pynchon of "Against the Day," in fact, is precicely the Thomas Pynchon we need. Yet he is a... [MORE]

alec michod

Nov 15, 2006 12:54

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