BARBELITH underground
 

Subcultural engagement for the 21st Century...
Barbelith is a new kind of community (find out more)...
You can login or register.


Pynchon rumours....

 
 
Trebor
12:49 / 10.11.04
Stirrings are occuring on the Pynchon list of a possible new novel, based in the early 20th century and focusing on a mathematician in Gothenburg.

Anyone heard anything to support/contradict this? There has, supposedly, been a comic strip in the New Yorker recently about it, any Americans see this?
 
 
Trebor
13:02 / 10.11.04
After trawling through a considerable amount of in list squabbling, here is the relevant email (and yes, I realise I got the city wrong):

Quote

>Just wishful thinking, I guess, but did Naumann say
>anything at all about Pynchon's current projects?
>Anything about the next book?

No wishful thinking: Michael Naumann said that Pynchon
had told him that a new novel was in the works. In its
center (if that is the term to use here) is supposed
to stand a young female Russian mathematician, who at
the beginning of the century belonged to the circle around
David Hilbert, the famous mathematician then teaching
in Goettingen. She then falls in love with a
colleague...

/Quote
 
 
Grand Panjandrum of the Pointless
19:27 / 13.11.04
This is quite an old rumour. I believe it was first put about back in 2000. But
Pynchon takes a lot of time over his books, and the provenance of the rumour is good (German culture minister and friend of P). The scenario sounds pretty cool. I remember reading somewhere that the heroine was the first woman ever to gain a higher degree in mathematics + was also a friend of both Marx and Darwin. So with any luck we should get a Pynchonian take on the intellectual world of the nineteenth century, with interesting tinges of feminism, a book which I for one would be most happy to read.
 
 
I, Libertine
12:34 / 15.11.04
I've heard it has something to do with Godzilla and Toho Studios as well...although this part of the rumor could have dealt with a different book.

But I wouldn't put it past Pynchon to relate them somehow, if he has time between all his gueat appearances on The Simpsons. Getting to be a regular character in his interrogative paper-bag, isn't he?
 
 
I, Libertine
12:35 / 15.11.04
...And Mason & Dixon was the rumored next novel before Vineland was even released.

Pynchon takes 10-20 years to write a big book.
 
 
The Timaximus, The!
05:15 / 25.06.06
Due in December?

Surprisingly, this isn't all over the place, not even on The Modern Word or the Pomona page. Did someone at the L.A. Times get punked, as they say?
 
 
astrojax69
07:29 / 25.06.06
wow, thanks! know what i'll be getting me for xmas...

and he's 69 now - a last book? an appropriate age to retire!
 
 
STOATIE LIEKS CHOCOLATE MILK
15:36 / 25.06.06
Wicked! Roll on December!
 
 
Baz Auckland
01:17 / 26.06.06
I can't wait!

...but 69 is hardly time to retire! There are some great writers who were putting out books well into their 70s...

I guess the last thing we need though is some awful "Excerpts from Pynchon's Unfinished Novel" published some 15-20 years from now...
 
 
andrew cooke
02:50 / 10.07.06
wonder if it's at all related to emmy noether? german, not russian, but the right dates and scene, and one of the few really stand-out female mathematicians (modulo being recognised etc etc).

that would be pretty sweet - i was looking something to read about her earlier today, and there's not much.
 
 
buttergun
16:48 / 28.07.06
Anyone caught this? Pynchon himself has written a summary of the novel (titled "Against the Day") on Amazon.com -- found something somewhere else which confirms the summary is really by him:

AGAINST THE DAY

Reading that, a smile was just plastered on my face...I love this guy, I really do.
 
 
buttergun
16:51 / 28.07.06
More news to be had here, right hand side of the page:

PYNCHON NEWS FEED

The Guardian Unlimited report is the one which confirms Pynchon wrote the Amazon blurb.
 
 
MrKismet
13:50 / 29.07.06
PYNCHON RESURFACES.
Thomas Pynchon's new novel, "Against the Day," and will be published by Penguin Press in December and runs over 900 pages. Here's the description from Amazon.com: "Spanning the period between the Chicago World's Fair of 1893 and the years just after World War I, this novel moves from the labor troubles in Colorado to turn-of-the-century New York, to London and Gottingen, Venice and Vienna, the Balkans, Central Asia, Siberia at the time of the mysterious Tunguska Event, Mexico during the Revolution, postwar Paris, silent-era Hollywood, and one or two places not strictly speaking on the map at all.

"With a worldwide disaster looming just a few years ahead, it is a time of unrestrained corporate greed, false religiosity, moronic fecklessness, and evil intent in high places. No reference to the present day is intended or should be inferred. "The sizable cast of characters includes anarchists, balloonists, gamblers, corporate tycoons, drug enthusiasts, innocents and decadents, mathematicians, mad scientists, shamans, psychics, and stage magicians, spies, detectives, adventuresses, and hired guns. There are cameo appearances by Nikola Tesla, Bela Lugosi, and Groucho Marx. "As an era of certainty comes crashing down around their ears and an unpredictable future commences, these folks are mostly just trying to pursue their lives. Sometimes they manage to catch up; sometimes it's their lives that pursue them.

"Meanwhile, the author is up to his usual business. Characters stop what they're doing to sing what are for the most part stupid songs. Strange sexual practices take place. Obscure languages are spoken, not always idiomatically. Contrary-to-the-fact occurrences occur. If it is not the world, it is what the world might be with a minor adjustment or two. According to some, this is one of the main purposes of fiction.

"Let the reader decide, let the reader beware. Good luck. –Thomas Pynchon"
 
 
buttergun
19:12 / 24.08.06
FIRST PAGE HERE.
 
 
Baz Auckland
01:50 / 29.08.06
(Warning, file is BIG)
 
 
ORA ORA ORA ORAAAA!!
13:40 / 29.08.06
yeah, for those who don't want to download a 23MB file for one page, you can get a jpeg version here.

Because I love you.
 
 
buttergun
14:04 / 17.11.06
Out next week. Read a few reviews already, and all are mostly positive. My favorite mini-review so far:

"It's really the culmination of all that Pynchon has written before, with the myriad characters, humor, technology, intricate structure and wonderful writing that are the hallmarks of his writing. It almost seems as if all these books were written at the same time, interweaving characters and themes ... a world that Pynchon has created and into which he allows us to peer every so often, this time for 1085 pages! I'm sure longtime fans will be mightily pleased with this latest view. This is one to be read again and again."
 
 
Tsuga
11:05 / 18.11.06
Well, I'm excited. I pre-ordered mine, so I hope to get it soon and get started. Maybe by sometime in 2008 I'll have something to say about it.
 
 
STOATIE LIEKS CHOCOLATE MILK
15:15 / 18.11.06
There's an excerpt and a two-page article on the man in today's Guardian Review.
 
 
jamesPD
08:35 / 04.10.08
Quite a few rumors on the net this week about a new Pynchon novel set to be published in August 2009. A 400 page noir novel set in the 60s. Read more here.

In other news Tristan Taormino, the Village Voice sex columnist, is apparently Pynchon's neice, which isn't nearly as exciting. (But possibly a NSFW link, you pervs)
 
 
Mark Parsons
20:08 / 06.10.08
No longer a rumor. The pub has confirmed the major (yet sketchy) details.
 
 
buttergun
15:32 / 17.04.09
It's titled Inherent Vice, it will be released in August of this year, and you can read a synopsis and an excerpt HERE.
 
  
Add Your Reply