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The Crying of Lot 49
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon &
This uninvited collaboration between Mr. Pynchon and myself explores the original text of The Crying of Lot 49, with the added narrative of the dead Pierce Invararity throughout. This voice acts almost as Oedipa Maass conscious, suggesting that he lives on in her mind while the story unfolds. He also speaks to the audience and to other characters within the book (who, of course, are completely oblivious). I tried to derive from the original text as much as I could about Pierce, deeming him obscenely rich, manipulative, and pompous. This, as you will see, becomes very apparent rather quickly.
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review
The_Penniless_Author
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Pickpick

Pynchon is such a recognizable figure that it can be hard to remember that I'd never actually read anything that he'd written (until now). Rating a Pynchon novel feels like a loaded exercise, like I'm wading into a generations-old war between one side that believes he's the greatest writer ever to put pen to paper and another side that believes that everyone from the first group is a pretentious know-nothing masquerading as an intellectual. 👇

The_Penniless_Author This is the type of book where it helps to have a guide. I am glad that before I read this, I had the benefit of getting the great Sarah Churchwell's insights into the book's larger themes, recurring references, imagery, etc., a lot of which was hiding in plain sight (she's also a guest on the episode of Backlisted where they discuss this novel). In the end, I fall squarely into the "this is a masterpiece" camp. Like all great novels, at its ? 5mo
The_Penniless_Author ...root it's existentialist - is there a point to all this, or is it just meaningless, random occurrences? Are those moments of epiphany or paranoia where we think we perceive the hidden architecture beneath day to day life real or a trick of the mind? Given how surreal and conspiracy-minded real life has become I can't believe postmodernism ever went out of vogue (or maybe, on second thought, that's exactly why it did 🤔). 5mo
Suet624 This is quite the review! And I have to admit i haven‘t read any Pynchon. 5mo
34 likes1 stack add3 comments
blurb
The_Penniless_Author
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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One summer afternoon Mrs Oedipa Maas came home from a Tupperware party whose hostess had put perhaps too much kirsch in the fondue to find that she, Oedipa, had been named executor, or she supposed executrix, of the estate of one Pierce Inverarity, a California real estate mogul who had once lost two million dollars in his spare time but still had assets numerous and tangled enough to make the job of sorting it all out more than honorary.

Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks That‘s a long sentence 🤣 5mo
29 likes1 comment
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sarahbellum
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Panpan

Uh… what?

I think I‘m glad I read this? It at least saved me from wasting time on Gravity‘s Rainbow 😬

January‘s #doublespin and another #1001books checked off @TheAromaofBooks

TheAromaofBooks Oh dear. At least it's off the list!! 2y
dabbe I tried like the first page and went 🤯. No TP for me-me. 😀 2y
51 likes2 comments
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Jari-chan
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Pickpick

My first Pynchon! And what a great read it was! I like mindfucks and this sure is one 😁 And I even learned something about the history of the post business!

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Patchshank
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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https://www.cnn.com/2020/04/19/us/digital-libraries-from-your-couch-trnd/index.h...
A list of 7 digital libraries.

Today is also the start of National Library Week 🎆🎉

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rukhaiyaar
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
Pickpick

Neo Noir Classic.

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Butterfinger
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Update

Satire - The Crying of Lot 49

Drama - A Raisin in the Sun

Up Next:

LGBTQ Romance - Red Scrolls of Magic

Regency - Frederica

Geenie Nice. 👍 5y
Butterfinger Thanks @Yoshi-and-a-book 5y
38 likes2 comments
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Butterfinger
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon &
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Panpan

I'm not sure what I read. This is what I know:

1. New York Times called it a satire. It was set in southern CA so I could tell the cultural pieces - actors being lawyers and so forth, drugs, rock and roll, CIA involvement

2. Oedipa was the MC's name so I knew going in there would be incest. I was not mistaken.

3. A crazy mystery about a postal service that kills people who find out about it. Yeah, this is where I got lost.

4. LSD trip

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review
conorwes
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
Pickpick

A fun and worthy read.

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eachwishrezigned
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
Panpan

My husband, a Pynchon fan, says I just didn‘t want to like this book. But that‘s not true. I don‘t read books I don‘t want to like. I want to enjoy every reading experience. I just didn‘t like this book. I didn‘t ever get a feel for the main character‘s personality, I didn‘t like the prose, and I never got into the story itself either. Pynchon himself spoke negatively of it later on, so I can‘t be totally wrong. Sorry to bring that 36% even lower.

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EmilieGR
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
Mehso-so

Liked parts but others were boring

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andrew61
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Pickpick

This week in rdg group we read this my 1st Thomas pynchon. Im not sure i can describe it in the few words available here other than i loved its anarchic drug infused madness, moving from a gruesome elizabethan play to the history of 17th century post service in Eur to a philatelic auction but i hated feeling out of my depth and confused. Dare i read more pynchon- im tempted but may have to reread this, not tonight but wine or lsd i think wd help.

Blaire I read this one back in high school and think I would benefit from a reread. 6y
andrew61 @Blaire did you enjoy it then? I wonder if some books depend upon the age you are when you read them - probably catcher in the rye is the classic example. 6y
Blaire @andrew61 nope. I didn‘t get it at all. It wasn‘t for class and was not a good one to tackle on my own without a teacher‘s insight. 6y
33 likes3 comments
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dr.dalton
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Thomas Pynchon is one of my favorite authors, so I finally decided to officially join W.A.S.T.E.

Taylor Pynchon rocks 6y
jmofo Yay! I got me one of those! Mine‘s behind my ear. Also welcome!!! (edited) 6y
CoffeeNBooks Welcome to Litsy! 📚 6y
See All 12 Comments
tpixie Welcome to Litsy! ♥️📚♥️ 6y
Ericalambbrown Welcome to Litsy! 6y
candority Welcome to Litsy! 📚😊 6y
Smrloomis Welcome 🥳 6y
Purrfectpages Welcome to Litsy! 6y
BarbaraTheBibliophage Welcome! You‘ll find that many of us have literary tattoos also! 6y
rather_be_reading awesome! 6y
Leftcoastzen Beautiful! Welcome! 6y
nudibranch Yesssssss! 6y
51 likes2 stack adds12 comments
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garryvntr
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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I'm about to start reading this.
Any thoughts or opinions on this book?
They would be greatly appreciated.

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jmofo
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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1. Virginia Woolf. Period. Not that much happens but thoughts and feelings. Besides, I would love to be so well understood and so gently destroyed.
2. The Crying of Lot 49 3. 5‘7”? Mebbe? 4. So many ways! Nearly all the ways!

alisonrose Thanks for playing! 6y
29 likes2 comments
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Emilymdxn
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Adore Waterstones Tottenham Court Road - they always pick such good displays! #bookshop

britt_brooke 😍 6y
batsy Oooh 😍😍 6y
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wanderinglynn
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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#bookmail Thank you @JenP 😀 I can‘t wait to dive in!!!

Plus, I just finished my 3-D VW bus puzzle. Love that it came with a surfboard.

Maewyn Love the puzzle! My dad had a VW Bus like that for a time. A roommate did also. The first day he moved in he locked himself out of it with everything he owned packed inside.😳 6y
Crystalblu I need that puzzle! 6y
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kidmonster
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"Tell me a story about a complicated man."

some light summer reading ?

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JenP
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Anyone want any/all of these books?

wanderinglynn Yes, I‘m interested, particularly in the Thomas Pynchon and DH Lawrence 6y
JenP @wanderinglynn great! They are yours. Send me your mailing address to jenlane3[at]yahoo[dot]com 6y
corycatelyn My absolute darling sounds interesting...if no one has claimed it...I'll take that please 🤗 6y
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OrangeMooseReads I‘m interested in White Tiger 6y
JenP @corycatelyn ok. Send me your address to the email I listed above and I‘ll send it to you.be warned that there are some graphic abuse scenes. 6y
JenP @OrangeMooseReads 👍. Send me your mailing address 6y
corycatelyn I heard that...I think it will be ok 6y
54 likes7 comments
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britt_brooke
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Today‘s, #Goodwill #bookhaul. All are #TBR except the AJ Jacobs.

Skyrimir I LOVE Goodwill/thrift shop book hauls! 7y
britt_brooke @Skyrimir I love the thrill of the hunt! 💚 7y
136 likes2 comments
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AshleyHoss820
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Mehso-so

I was all over the place with this book. And maybe we‘re supposed to be. As far as unreliable narrators go, Oedipa ranks pretty high. I liked the writing style, I liked quite a few of the characters, I liked how silly it was...but something just felt off, for me. I felt lost for a majority of this book...is that the desired effect? 🤷🏻‍♀️🤷🏻‍♀️🤷🏻‍♀️
135/1,001 #1001Books

Sarahreadstoomuch I‘ve had this on my shelf for AGES! Someday.... 7y
BookwormM If it was the desired effect it was well and truly achieved 🤣🤣🤣 7y
AshleyHoss820 @Sarahreadstoomuch Good news is, it‘s a short book! So whether you like it or not, it doesn‘t take up too much time! 😄😄😄 (edited) 7y
AshleyHoss820 @BookwormM Hahah!!! Yes! It! Was! 😂😂🤣🤣 7y
77 likes4 comments
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Nebklvr
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Mehso-so

The only thing saving this from “pan” status is the madcap momentum that propels you forward against your better judgment. Perhaps if I were partaking the drug of choice, the sheer juvenile giggling I could feel in the author‘s word choices wouldn‘t bother me as much.

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Nebklvr
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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I have a 110 pages to go. Do I have the patience for this? It feels like I can see the author, high as a kite, horny, and giggling as he names his characters Hilarious, Mucho Mas, and Fallopian. Sigh....This was recommended so I will try....

mrsh62010 Sounds laborious! Maybe get on the author's level haha... 7y
Nebklvr @mrsh62010 That would be easier if I were a teenaged boy 7y
45 likes2 comments
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Leniverse
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Mehso-so

After the first chapter I wanted to bail. Somewhere before the end it became almost a pick. Is this book a hallucination by the protagonist? Or by the author? Would it be more accessible to a reader who has experienced southern California in the early 1960s? I suppose it is, at least in part, about our need for symbols and patterns, and our (in) ability to constitute reality. I'm left mainly with an urge to scribble the Tristero symbol everywhere.

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Leniverse
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon

'Day by day, Wendell is less himself and more generic. He enters a staff meeting and the room is suddenly full of people, you know? He's a walking assembly of man.'

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sprainedbrain
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Mehso-so

I started off strong with this book. For the first chapter, I really felt like I knew what was happening and was interested. Somewhere after that, I got lost, and by the end I was just confused. It‘s short, competently written, and made me laugh a few times, plus the narration was good. I just don‘t really get the point?

So does Trystero exist? Is Oedipa insane? Perhaps a better question... do I care? 😳😂

#1001books

⭐️⭐️1/2

DreesReads And had the same questions!! As did Oedipa lol. 7y
ephemeralwaltz Your last question was a "no" for me ??? 7y
sprainedbrain @ephemeralwaltz that‘s where I‘m landing on that question, too. 😂 7y
Liz_M Ha! 7y
117 likes5 comments
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DreesReads
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Mehso-so

What a weird book. I think I would actually like this if there was an actual resolution at the end. Any resolution. Is Tristero real? Does WASTE exist? Is Oedipa mentally ill/caught in a prank/or chasing something real? Oh so confusing. I feel like I would have loved this in high school. Now? I need resolution! The wordplay is interesting, but given the book is 50+ years old, perhaps dated? #1001books #reading1001

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Leniverse
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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March hasn't been the best month for reading so far, but I'm finally starting this for #Reading1001
In other news, still struggling with Ulysses. 🙄

BookwormM Hmm I wouldn‘t pin your hopes on this one to make it better 🤣🤣 7y
Leniverse @BookwormM Yeah... Based on the first chapter, I'd say you're right. 😆 At least this one is much, much shorter. 😂 Currently feeling quite happy it's this Pynchon and not Gravity's Rainbow. 7y
Anglemark I read 1/3 of Ulysses a couple of years ago but had to take a break and never got back to it again... 7y
Leniverse @Anglemark 😂 I can understand that! I'm about a third in now and not quit ready to throw in the towel. I would like to plow through it just to get it over with, but I find I am physically and mentally unable to read more than a dozen pages (if that) per day. 😰 7y
49 likes4 comments
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sprainedbrain
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Lunchtime #audiowalk today...

I have almost no idea what the heck I‘m listening to, but hey, I closed all of my rings. 🤪

BookwormM Know the feeling 7y
sprainedbrain @BookwormM Some of the books on the list are great... and some are great for other people but maybe not me. 😂 7y
127 likes2 comments
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DreesReads
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Next up! I am nervous about this one, I suspect it might be too weird for my taste. At least it‘s short. #1001books

mcipher I‘m supposed to read this in my husband‘s recommendation but I‘m worried I‘ll hate it so i keep putting it off. 7y
BarbaraBB 🤞🤞 7y
DreesReads @mcipher at least it‘s short!!! 7y
mcipher True! And the cover of yours is pretty. Are you enjoying it? 7y
DreesReads @mcipher it was interesting and certain parts were very well done. The lack of resolution is frustrating!! 7y
36 likes1 stack add5 comments
review
Riveted_Reader_Melissa
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Panpan

I pushed through most of it in 1 day, half read/half audio just to get to the end & see if there was any real ending. For me personally it was The Da Vinci Code with postal conspiracies, but with less science & scholarly work, full of impaired informants, whose cast in my mind‘s eye looked like 60‘s typecast players (I pictured cast members of WKRP)

If you are a Vonnegut fan, this one is most likely right up your alley, but it just wasn‘t for me.

GarthRanzz I felt exactly the same way! Nothing against philately but this book didn‘t do their hobby any favours. 7y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @GarthRanzz Sadly, if it had been a straight postal history possible conspiracy, written more like a historical mystery novel, I would have enjoyed that. But there‘s a lot of subplots and possible clues that he goes into way too much depth with (the play and the movie comes to mind), that just muddy the waters. And I know some will love the satire of the times tangents, but to me those were annoying. 7y
BookwormM Still waiting for my copy 7y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @BookwormM Sorry. The audio version is on Scribd if you want to sign up for the free trial month and listen to it there....just remember to cancel then, unless you love it. 7y
71 likes3 stack adds5 comments
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Riveted_Reader_Melissa
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Both circuitry swirls and road maps/housing clusters have a repetitive looking pattern of swirling that just might mean something if only we bothered to find out..... 👌so far

And they all look like hieroglyphics to be deciphered from above, and both actually do mean something if you study electronics or city planning...

But my brain keeps thinking, just like crop circles... 🤷‍♀️😂

Riveted_Reader_Melissa Probably a good sign to put this one down for the night and get some sleep. 💤 7y
GarthRanzz I read this in 2016 as part of my effort to read books for my 50th from the year I was born. Just didn‘t click with me. 7y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @GarthRanzz I had a similar problem when I tried that for a challenge and read a few from the year I was born. Mine was Breakfast of Champions, and I didn‘t love it either. Sorry Vonnegut fans. 7y
DreesReads This was one of the paragraphs I really enjoyed! I kept forgetting the book is 50 years old. So many questions. Is this satire? Are these places meant to be somewhere in particular, or is it just general SoCal? 7y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @AudreyMorris Yes, I agree...there is something great about some of the phrasing and writing. And yes I think it‘s supposed to be satire, and definitely Southern CA area. 7y
45 likes5 comments
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Riveted_Reader_Melissa
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Hmmm... I think the names in this book might be trying to tell me something about their characters personalities.... I can‘t imagine why?

#Reading1001

britt_brooke 😆 7y
45 likes1 comment
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Riveted_Reader_Melissa
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Interesting beginning to this book... I‘m intrigued...

Not sure if it‘s meant to be or not, but this seems like a great metaphor for the larger system of gender (also minority) suppression by the group, and the idea that the Knight can‘t rescue (because he‘s part of the same system), and if she can‘t figure out what‘s put her in the tower and why (from social norms to gaslighting), she may go mad or develop some superstition to explain it....

Riveted_Reader_Melissa (Cont.) ... (Princess in towers for one), or hobby to distract from it...what‘s the Greek legend about Penelope weaving in the tower until her husband returns from war.... 🤷‍♀️. I‘ll have to see where this story leads, but I‘m already guessing they‘ll be a lot of undercurrents in this strange story. 7y
BookwormM Still waiting for my copy 7y
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JenP
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Panpan

Nope.

sprainedbrain Ugh... I haven‘t started it yet. 7y
JenP @sprainedbrain well a couple people in our group rated it 4-5 stars so maybe you‘ll love it. Satire isn‘t my favorite genre and I found this one particularly incomprehensible. (edited) 7y
bernadette It's been a long time since I read it but I remembering liking the frenetic energy in it as the character spirals into paranoia - or maybe not? I can't remember if there really is a conspiracy or not or if it was left ambiguous. And thankfully the story is short since I don't think I could have dealt with it being any longer... 7y
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TricksyTails Cute bookstand! 😻 7y
KellyHunsakerReads Yeah. I detested this one. 7y
ephemeralwaltz @bernadette left ambiguous. I was so ready for this to be over. I didn't even care about the conspiracy being resolved or not. Sorry you disliked it! @JenP 7y
tstan It‘s been a long time since I read it, but I remember liking some parts, and strongly disliking others. I‘m not rereading it, though! 7y
JenP @tstan there are a few things I found funny so I didn‘t hate it but I did dislike it. 7y
JenP @TricksyTails ha ha, thanks 7y
JenP @ephemeralwaltz @bernadette yes, ambiguous. I felt similarly to you @ephemeralwaltz in that all that kept me going was to reach the end so I could be done with it. It actually made me fall asleep which is why it took me 11 days to finish it 😂 7y
58 likes1 stack add10 comments
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JenP
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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I credit my current reading slump with this book which I neither understand nor enjoy reading. #1001books

Ladygodiva7 That‘s my next book :/ 7y
JenP @Ladygodiva7 maybe you‘ll like it more than me 😬 7y
JenP @Ladygodiva7 I‘m also only 34 pages in, but it has been a long 34 7y
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Ladygodiva7 I will let you know! 7y
emilyhaldi Yikes!! 7y
Notafraidofwords It‘s a terrible book. 7y
vivastory This is my fear with tackling all of the #1001 list. The inevitable slump inducers. 7y
BarbaraBB @vivastory The complete list now exists of 1305 books. I promised myself I am allowed to skip 304 books. I am sure Pynchon will be among them although I will have to try at least one of his books! 7y
merelybookish @BarbaraBB ha! Excellent logic! 7y
merelybookish @JenP I think it's okay to bail on books, even ones on the #1001 list. 7y
JenP @BarbaraBB @vivastory then there are also the repulsive books like 7y
JenP @BarbaraBB i shudder at the prospect of reading 7y
vivastory @JenP I've read that one, it's disgusting & overrated imho 7y
BarbaraBB Story of the Eye is horrible. And what to think of all those Beckett‘s? And 7y
ephemeralwaltz Ugh :( good luck. I've been discussing it in class and maybe it'll help you to know that one of the main points that Pynchon makes in this is the need for an epistemological shift in America after the Cold War. Another way of reading the world and ordering it is what Oedipa discovers while seeing how much damage Inverarity (through Capitalism) has done. (I hated this though and relate to you right now - I wish I had some previous insight) 7y
JenP @BarbaraBB ha ha, I forgot about all those Becketts. Although it think I‘ve read half of them thankfully. Haven‘t attempted Finnegans yet 😊 7y
JenP @ephemeralwaltz thanks. That does help a bit 7y
Chili At least it‘s short. Gravity‘s Rainbow was long, disgusting and boring. 7y
BookwormM Still waiting for my library copy I am struggling with Time if the Hero 🙁 7y
Ladygodiva7 Dislike!! Couldn‘t wait to finish it and get on with my life! 7y
AshleyHoss820 I detested Crash. It‘s such a bummer that this happens with some of these books on The List...120 Days of Sodom almost made me puke. I made it through, but still... 7y
JenP @AshleyHoss820 I hated crash too. Don‘t try Story of the Eye 🤮 7y
AshleyHoss820 @JenP hahaha!! Duly noted! I‘m so glad I‘m not alone about Crash. The reviews on Goodreads were so different from how I felt! 7y
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JenP
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Having completed chapter 1, i can safely say that I don‘t really understand any of what I‘ve just read. #1001books

I do find the names of characters and places fairly amusing though, especially the husband whose name is Mucho Maas.

LeahBergen 😂😂 7y
Notafraidofwords I have read this twice and I still don‘t know what the hell it‘s trying to do 7y
LazyDays Poor thing 😂😊 I know what you mean. 7y
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tif Reasons I refuse to read the 1001 books! 7y
JenP @tif really? But there are some amazing books on the list. It‘s not a flawless list by any means but some of my favorite books I‘ve discovered by reading the list. Although also some of my least favorite books 😂 7y
JenP @Notafraidofwords ha ha, well I guess I should expect much to change for me. 7y
tif @JenP i don't mean I'll never read a book on the list of it looks like something I would enjoy. I'm just not going to make myself read every book on the list just because they're supposed to be someone's idea of the best books 😊 there's too many good books out there to force myself to read books I don't enjoy! 7y
JenP @tif ah, that makes sense. I can understand that. I am trying to read the whole list but some (not this one bc I‘m only 12 pages in) are truly awful 7y
sprainedbrain This doesn‘t bode well. 😂 7y
JenP @sprainedbrain I‘m finding it kind of funny despite not understanding any of it 😂 7y
merelybookish When I was in grad school, the professor who studied Pynchon was a jerk. All of his advisees who studied Pynchon were jerks too. That was enough to turn me off of ever reading anything by Pynchon. 7y
JenP @merelybookish I guess it‘s good I didn‘t pick one of his books for our swap 😂 7y
Chili I‘ve finished it and really don‘t know what it‘s about. I think it‘s better than Gravity‘s Rainbow, which I absolutely hated. I don‘t understand why he has so many books on the list. At least this one was short. 7y
merelybookish @JenP A dilemma indeed! 7y
batsy "Gut fear and female cunning", eh? How long can I maintain this side-eye without hurting my eye balls 7y
BarbaraBB I haven‘t read any book by him. Everybody seems to hate his books. Why are there so many on the list?! I have to try at least one, some day...😬 7y
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JenP
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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#1001books goodreads group is reading these two short books as out BOTM for March. We‘re also celebrating women‘s history month with 4 options and finishing up Blonde by Oates.

We have discussion folders for each book. Stop by and join in the discussion if you are interested. https://www.goodreads.com/group/show/180736-reading-1001

JenP @ephemeralwaltz discussion topic is up for the tagged book. We‘d love you to drop by and share any insights you got from the book and your class discussion. People just started reading it March 1 7y
ephemeralwaltz @JenP thank you for the heads up! I'll be joining in :) 7y
JenP @ephemeralwaltz yay! Because I‘m now 20 pages in and have no idea what I‘m reading about 7y
ephemeralwaltz @JenP relatable 😂😂 7y
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JenP
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Getting some reading in and charging up while I wait around for power so I can shower 😖. It‘s currently 54 degrees inside our house. At what point do I need to remove our cat to a warmer location?

I‘m losing my mind after only 24 hours which makes me put into perspective the folks in Puerto Rico who are still struggling with obtaining steady power.

jhod 😔😔 hope it gets sorted soon 7y
JenP @jhod thanks. We are hearing maybe tomorrow but still no ETA. When are you getting water back? 7y
jhod It is already I'm afraid - only lasted about 6 hours, though still meant the supermarket sold out of bottled water! 7y
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JenP @jhod oh glad to hear it‘s back. Was it because of the snow all you got there? (edited) 7y
jhod Yes - it was burst pipes apparently - the UK is not set up for cold weather 7y
TrishB @jhod our pipes froze and we had to get plumber out today .... definitely not set up for the cold weather! 7y
BookwormM My snow has melted managed to get to library and collect Good Morning Midnight. Lot 49 is still on order. 7y
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Kristelh
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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#reading 1001 #MarchBOTM, we are reading this short work of Thomas Pynchon over at Reading 1001 on GR if you would like to discuss this one. Started yesterday, finished today. First book of March. This one is a Quest and reminds me of Ulysses by Joyce.
@BookwormM #1001

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review
ephemeralwaltz
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Mehso-so

Um... So I'm not sure how to rate this because half of the time I wasn't even sure what I was reading. The writing's good, the story's inventive, the dark satire is strong but I didn't enjoy this. I wouldn't have picked it up if it weren't for one of my courses - I'm just not interested at all (!!) in this type of literature.
After having read that this might be Pynchon's most accessible novel, I don't think I'll be reading any more soon.

⭐⭐

ephemeralwaltz Also, I strongly dislike this cover for some reason. 7y
JenP Oh no. We‘ll be reading this for our 1001 group over at goodreads in March. You‘re welcome to join us for the discussion even if just to tell us you hated it 😂 I had high hopes for it 😬 7y
ephemeralwaltz @JenP thanks for letting me know. You might enjoy it - I just had a hard time with it and wasn't interested in what is going on. 7y
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ephemeralwaltz @JenP I think I'll enjoy talking about it in class - I hole to get more than just my reading experience. 7y
JenP @ephemeralwaltz I missed that you were reading it for class. Let me know how that discussion goes! 7y
ephemeralwaltz @JenP of course! I'll join the 1001 GR group - thanks😘 7y
JenP @ephemeralwaltz I‘ll tag you when the discussion is posted. I‘m sure reading it in class will give you insight we will miss so it will be nice to have someone join who can point out some of those insights 7y
RiotMom Oh man. I tried to read this to impress a dude when I was 20. It.... did not go well 😂 7y
ephemeralwaltz @RiotMom lesson learned 😂😂😂 7y
Vinjii Oh dear. I‘ve been told to try Vineland. But mostly one day I wanted to read Gravity Rainbow. Uh-hoh. 7y
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ephemeralwaltz
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Another mini bookhaul! 👏🎉😍

Vinjii I‘ve been told to start Pynchon with The Crying Lot. It‘s on my list for 2018. 7y
ephemeralwaltz @Vinjii it's my first Pynchon, too! I'm reading it for school - I'm a few chapters in and it's one of those books that I don't really know if I'm enjoying or not.. if that makes any sense 7y
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review
heylaurenmack
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
Mehso-so

I‘m trying to think of a way to say this that isn‘t just “Where was this going?”

I understand we were supposed to be tracing WASTE and rebellion through Freudian, etc veins. Normally I can follow Pynchon around his tales but dude. The road we took to a mostly unresolved end was littered with too many detours for my taste. #thisreviewfeelsignorant

diovival This book put me to sleep. 7y
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heylaurenmack
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon

Look what‘s happening to them. In school they got brainwashed - Morse and his Telegraph, Bell and his telephone, Edison and his light bulb. Only one man per invention. Then when they grow up they found out they had to sign all their rights to a monster; got stuck on some project or “task force” or “team”. Nobody wanted them to invent - only perform their little role in a design ritual. They can always tell when they come on another of their kind.

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GoneFishing
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon

#firstsentence thx @Cathythoughts tagging @Anna40 “One summer afternoon Mrs. Oedipa Maas came home from a Tupperware party whose hostess had put perhaps too much kirsch in the fondue to find that she, Oedipa, had been named executor, or she supposed executrix, of the estate of one Pierce Inverarity, a California real estate mogul who had once lost 2 million dollars in his spare time but still had assets numerous and tangled enough to make...

Cathythoughts This writer is really drawing us in ...... 7y
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Vickythebookfanatic
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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Tube reading...

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Gerthquake
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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"...here were God knew how many citizens, deliberately choosing not to communicate by U.S. Mail. It was not an act of treason, nor possibly even of defiance. But it was a calculated withdrawal, from the life of the Republic, from its machinery. Whatever else was being denied them out of hate, indifference to the power of their vote, loopholes, simple ignorance, this withdrawal was their own, unpublicized, private."

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LeahLovesLit
The Crying of Lot 49 | Thomas Pynchon
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I first read this as a freshman in college and spent most of the book totally confused. I just finished rereading and while I can appreciate more of it, I still don't get a whole lot. The cover art, though, is great.