SHADOW TICKET - THOMAS PYNCHON
If Pynchon writes it, I’m gonna read it. He’s one of the authors I’m a completist (except, to my shame, his short story collection, which I’ll get to soon) with and next year I hope to reread the three biggies in his oeuvre. He’s quite old, and there is a question, to which I will return, about whether or not this will be his final work. Honestly, it is tricky to read this book without that in mind. That being said, it’s classic Pynchon. It follows that basic Pynchon framework, it follows a mystery through a discrete period a time, branching off and digressing the total effect being something like glimpses of vast forces and dark conspiracies. It’s silly and funny, there are lots of song lyrics and some tonal playfulness (he almost always writes, “says” as “sez” for instance) and the general sense that the world’s smartest stoner is telling you a bizarre shaggy dog story. Like Inherent Vice, the book it’s most similar to, the plot follows a detective adjacent character, in this version, it’s a former strikebreaker turned private eye at a big private investigator company, who is trying to find a missing woman, in this version, the heiress to a cheese fortune. But, as in all Pynchon, the story is not really the story, it’s an excuse to flush out a world. In Shadow Ticket, we’re looking at the 30’s. Pynchon has now set novels in the immediate post war, the early 70’s, Colonial Amerika, the 50’s, the early 60’s, the turn of the millennium and the turn between the 19th and 20th centuries. Each time he really focuses on the forces and currents that shape the world and how dreams for better worlds are often thwarted by powerful, controlling forces who are better organized and better able to play the game than those who oppose them. This setting is particularly harrowing since we, the readers, know very much how this story ends. When we see fascists from across the world gathering and plotting we know it isn’t ideal chatter or only dumb bullshit. I know that certain big name reviews have suggested this novel doesn’t really have much to do with the present (and that this is a bad quality) but, man, hard to not see us as in a very similar place right now. Which isn’t to say that this book is a bummer. Like I said, it’s funny, whacky, quirky and really fun to read. Pynchon, as is his style, will whipsaw between Windingos and Thermines and Golems and Vampires and secret submarines and motorcycles, each time giving us quick, tasty little asides and short vignettes. His powers haven’t diminished at all, the man is firing on all cylinders, even in his late 80’s. One wonders how many of this size novel he could have written, if he’d stuck to only the Vinelands and Bleeding Edges and Inherent Vices, would he have written half a dozen more? One gets the sense that he could set one of these whenever he wanted, his knowledge of history and culture seems so vast and his viewpoint so unique that I’d read him in any period. Instead, he has peppered his life’s work with the aforementioned 3 massive novels that really show what he can do. I prefer those books, I think they’re really incredible and one-of-a-kind. There is a rumor that he has one more like that in him, hopefully mostly if not all finished about the period around the Civil War, one of the most pivotal points in Amerikan history he hasn’t directly addressed. I can only pray that a)this is real and b)we get to someday read this. If you’re looking to start the Pynchon journey, this would be a great entry point. Short (by his standards) propulsive, fun and the wellspring of many a quality ponder.