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Thomas Pynchon

Thomas Pynchon (pĬn´chən), 1937–, American novelist, b. Glen Cove, N.Y., grad. Cornell, 1958. Pynchon is noted for his amazingly fertile imagination, his wild sense of humor, and the teeming complexity of his novels. He is sometimes grouped with authors of black humor (such as Kurt Vonnegut and Joseph Heller), who turned from realism to fantasy to depict 20th-century American life. His early novels include V. (1963) and The Crying of Lot 49 (1966). His masterpiece is the complex and often obscure Gravity's Rainbow (1973, National Book Award), which displays his diverse erudition. Set in London during World War II, it is a discursive rumination on war and death. In 1984, he published a collection of early writings, Slow Learner. His later novels are Vineland (1990), the witty and encyclopedic Mason & Dixon (1997), the sprawling Against the Day (2006), and the psychedelic 1970s sleuth tale Inherent Vice (2009).



See studies by T. Tanner (1982), P. L. Cooper (1983), D. Seed (1988), S. C. Weisenburger (1988), J. Dugdale (1990), A. McHoul and D. Wills (1990), J. W. Slade (1990), J. Chambers (1992), H. Berressem (1993), A. W. Brownlie (2000), A. Mangen and R. Gaasland, ed. (2002), N. Abbas, ed. (2003), H. Bloom, ed. (2003), and D. Cowart (1980 and 2012); I. H. Dalsgaard et al., ed., The Cambridge Companion to Thomas Pynchon (2012).

The Columbia Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright© 2012, The Columbia University Press.

Selected full-text books and articles on this topic at Questia

Thomas Pynchon: The Art of Allusion
David Cowart. Southern Illinois University Press, 1980
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Thomas Pynchon: Reading from the Margins
Niran Abbas. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2003
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Pynchon's Mythography: An Approach to Gravity's Rainbow
Kathryn Hume; Curtis L. Clark. Southern Illinois University Press, 1987
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Pynchon and Mason and Dixon
Brooke Horvath; Irving Malin. Questia, 2000
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The Self-Conscious Novel: Artifice in Fiction from Joyce to Pynchon
Brian Stonehill. University of Pennsylvania Press, 1988
Librarian’s tip: Chap. VII "Paradoxical Pynchon; or, The Real World Inside Gravity's Rainbow"
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A Dangerous Crossing: French Literary Existentialism and the Modern American Novel
Richard Lehan. Southern Illinois University Press, 1973
Librarian’s tip: "Thomas Pynchon" begins on p. 157
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The Play of the Double in Postmodern American Fiction
Gordon E. Slethaug. Southern Illinois University Press, 1993
Librarian’s tip: Chap. 3 "Binary Intersubjectivity: Pynchon's Gravity's Rainbow"
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Mapping the "Unmappable": Inhabiting the Fantastic Interface of 'Gravity's Rainbow.'
Noya, Jose Liste. Studies in the Novel, Vol. 29, No. 4, Winter 1997
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Fiction in the Quantum Universe
Susan Strehle. University of North Carolina Press, 1992
Librarian’s tip: Chap. Two "Gravity's Rainbow and the Fiction of Quantum Continuity"
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Postmodern Exhaustion: Thomas Pynchon's 'Vineland' and the Aesthetic of the Beautiful
Conner, Marc C. Studies in American Fiction, Vol. 24, No. 1, Spring 1996
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Literature and Domination: Sex, Knowledge, and Power in Modern Fiction
M. Keith Booker. University Press of Florida, 1993
Librarian’s tip: Chap. 4 "Mastery and Sexual Domination: Imperialism as Rape in Pynchon's V"
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Ellipse of Uncertainty: An Introduction to Postmodern Fantasy
Lance Olsen. Greenwood Press, 1987
Librarian’s tip: Chap. 5 "Pynchon's New Nature: Indeterminacy and The Crying of Lot 49"
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