Download And Enjoy Gravitys Rainbow Brought To You By Thomas Pynchon Presented As Manuscript

dallied with the idea of writing a very short review, saying pithy things like:

"I'm glad that's over, "

or:

"Fuck, "

OR should I go more eloquent: "I'm going to set this day as an anniversary to commemorate why I'll never read this book again, "

But I think I'll just state that I think I just got postmoderned in the ass,


Or I could say some wonderful things about the novel, too, of which there are many, many wonderful things, such a great and funny commentary on WAR, Operant Conditioning, Drug Fiends, Erections, Scatophagy, Porn, Dirty Limericks, Porn, the Physics of rocketry and drug making, Porn, Orgasmo, Porn, and a great scene near the beginning that brought to mind Pink Floyd's The Wall movie with the buttcheeks over London mixed with a sampling of the BLOB and Bananas.


Do you think this was an easy book to read You might think so with all the Porn, But no. It's a drugtrip with funny scenes that's very smart and it goes way beyond my tolerance level for being smug, Maybe all this's and's thing about making sure every penis and vagina is getting it on to shock the straights just isn't for me, I'd like a little story with my porn, Fortunately, there's a lot of story hidden right beneath the surface, here, It might be hiding right beneath all the SS or a few more Nazis or just behind that other Nazi, or is it behind this one

Golly, it's kinda hard to find it.
I know it's there. But at least there's yet another erection and girls everywhere are flocking to this inexplicable sex symbol, . . but wait! Yeah I have to admit the nasal erection bit was funny as hell,

sigh

I've read better bricks, I've even had better bricks slam across my head,

Alas, this one was not a solid gold brick with a slice of lemon wrapped around it, but it might be just as crazy, Thank you, PanGalactic GargleBlaster. I need you so bad right now,

What is the real nature of control

From the first sentence of Pynchons National Book Award winning novel, Gravitys Rainbow, the Reader is transplanted into a threatening world where death strikes first, the cause second.
It is a world of frightening realism and comic absurdity, all fueled through drug induced hallucinations, paranoid ramblings, and psychological investigations that is not all that unlike our own reality once you remove yourself to view it from afar as if it were some painting in a gallery.
This is the Zone, and Pynchon is your field guide through the wasteland of paranoids, preterits and pornographers, The novel is stylistically staggering and so carefully researched that the line between fact and fiction blurs and is not always easy to deduce, It is carefully plotted out with extreme precision, aligning the events with actual weather detail from the days played out and in keeping with a metaphoric representation of the zodiac signs through the passing months.
While this novel can be demanding, it is also extremely rewarding for those who make it through this wild rocket ride of literature,

A first time Reader should be cautioned that Partof this mammoth text is exceedingly difficult, Pynchon seemingly takes great joy in pummeling the Reader with a labyrinthine structure of characters and plot lines, each accruing through dramatic left turns in the narrative.
The effect is pure disorientation, obfuscation and outright frustration, It feels just like sitelinkspinning plates, It is, in a sense, Pynchons boot camp for the real war awaiting across minefields of prose it is where he must break you down and reconstruct you as he sees fit.
While the Reader must keep their head down and gut through, soaking up as much of the swirling stories as they can, Pynchon lays out the groundwork for the larger themes to come.
Many of the ideas expressed early on wont seem particularly meaningful, but by the end of the novel the Reader will realize it was all right there in their faces from the start.
As characters will come and go like ghosts, with only minimal dimension and reference to them, the Reader will begin to realize that the coming tribulations are not there for the growth of the characters, but for the Reader themselves.
The Reader must come out the other side changed in order for the novel to be a success, They must let go of their notions of story and plot, for Pynchon views even the smallest plot structure as comfort, they must let go, give in, and submit to Pynchon.
He demands it, and he will fire off heady diatribes against your intellect with philosophy, theology, conspiracies and actual rocket science,

The novel takes off running once the gun sounds the start of Partwhen, dropped from foggy London town, the Reader finds themselves in the Zone.
Early on is a discussion of Pointsman and Mexico, Pointsman being crafted as the ultimate embodiment of Pavlovs causeandeffect conditioning and Mexico being considered as the Antipointsman.

The young statistician is devoted to number and method, not tablerapping or wishful thinking, But in the domain of zero to one, notsomething to something, Pointsman can only possess the zero and the one, He cannot, like Mexico, survive anyplace in between, to Mexico belongs the domain between zero and one the middle Pointsman has excluded from his persuasion the probabilities,

Much of this novel deals with these two major perspectives, Pynchon often establishes structure, the Pointsman method, merely to deconstruct it and show the faults that lie within, By showing two specific points, in this instance excluding those inbetween points, Pynchon is able to demonstrate moments of symmetry, which he will then reverse.
Normally a rocket would be heard before it explodes in a ball of death, but with the V, now we have the death before sound reversals also play a large key to the novel, from the countdown before a launch, to hypnotic imagery of English explorers sailing backwards to home.


These two specific points are also expressed as binary differences, such as black and white, life and death, good and evil, preterition and the chosen few.
These binaries are clearcut sides, direct opposites of forces in keeping with the theory of entropy which rules the novel, sides that we clamor to reach in order to have a firm ground to stand on and a cutanddry vision of who is friend and who is foe.
But Mexico, and Pynchon, rejects these binaries, Mexico acknowledges the space between zero and one, which is a wild, lawless nomans land recall the McCarthyesk western vision of Slothrops where there is one of everything a endlessly compounding one that creates an asymptote never actually reachingwhere everything and anything is possible.
It is a place more dream than reality, and the hallucinogenic nature of Pynchons spiraling prose and plots do well to express the ambiguities inherent in such a Zone.
However, the novel never fully subscribes to one theory and can be interpreted as a cautionary tale for those who wander into this territory, Plot, laws and binaries are structures that keep our minds at ease and provide comfort and safety, so when we enter into the infinite freedom of the decimal we open ourselves to forces that may scatter us, kill us, and rub us out into oblivion.


Pynchon himself will try to scatter and thwart the Reader in consequence of stepping into his Zone, He acknowledges you are in his territory, and will speak as he chooses, often with what seems an intention of belittling your own intelligence, He only occasionally makes concessions to the reader when he realizes at least a slight bridge must be made in setting a scene such as saying you will want cause and effect.
All right
, which, considering the rejection of such an idea in this novel, also serves to mock the reader for scrambling to grasp the reassuring ledge of the pool in the deep end he has thrown us.
To swallow this novel on a first read, a reader must attack it somewhat like middle school mathematical story problems find the important information in the bloated paragraph, divide and conquer.
There is a plethora of information to choose from as he will offer a vast variety of the same symbols and metaphors the symbolic us of the letter S, for example, shows up as the SS, the shape of the bomb factory tunnels, people spooning, the symbol for entropy, etc.
There is a death/life metaphor on practically every page Yet, Pynchon seems hellbent on keeping you on your toes and disoriented, He will allow the Reader to slide into a groove of strong forward velocity, and then deliver a scene so grotesquely funny or vilely disgusting to shock the readers mind and scatter their thoughts and perceptions from decoding this vast network of ideas and then tries to evade us in a web of looping plots, obtuse anecdotes and countless characters some of which come and go with hundreds of pages between mention.
The maze of a plot that must be navigated is acknowledged as being similar to the course of events Slothrop encounters on the way, which he compares to the Boston public transit MBTA:
by riding each branch the proper distance, knowing when to transfer, keeping some state of minimum grace though it might often look like hes headed the wrong way, this network of all plots may yet carry him to freedom.

There must be a sense of trust that eventually, if you keep gutting through, there will be a conclusion to satisfy a journey of such magnitude.
Honesty, this is successful and not only did I feel a massive sense of accomplishment for finishing this beast, but also felt satisfied intellectually and narrativewise,

There is a constant paranoia overwhelming each printed word, a paranoia that the Reader must assimilate by proxy in order to fully appreciate the madness at hand.
Yet paranoia itself must be a sort of comfort as
Download And Enjoy Gravitys Rainbow Brought To You By Thomas Pynchon Presented As Manuscript
well, While there is a fear of the Invisible Hand at play, pushing us through psychological nods in the right way, it is still a comfort that we are part of Their greater plan.
For the preterits, this They is the only sense of God they will ever feel, as they are looked over by God himself, This whole novel is the interaction of such Preterits, from the selfproclaimed fetishists to the colony of escaped concentration camp members, and the Reader must become a member of these second sheep as they must lose their selves along with Slothrop.
The Reader is dragged through the mud and muck of a smattering of various theories, and to keep their sanity, they attempt to assign meaning to these elusive threads flashing about them in order to keep going.


But perhaps this is just what Pynchon wants us to do, assigning Him the role of the They, and the Reader will begin to feel paranoid that this is all in jest, that Pynchon is simply pulling the world over their eyes and will begin to question even their own powers of deduction.
We have learned that all that is comforting must be released not yet knowing at these points in the novel that there is only a void awaiting with total freedom, and even the paranoid ponderings are only a comfort for us in Pynchons world.

If there is something comforting religious, if you want, about paranoia, there is still also antiparanoia, where nothing is connected to anything, a condition not many of us can bear for long.
Well right now, Slothrop feels himself sliding onto the antiparanoid part of his cycle, feels the whole city around him going back roofless, vulnerable, uncentered as he is, and only pasteboard images now of the Listening Enemy left between him and the wet sky

First, note the reversals in this, then swoon at the powerful prose in the second half.
Now, assign meaning to this quote but Slap, no! Pynchon says there is no meaning, But then feel yourself become transparent and weightless, fading into oblivion with no reference to the world around you, This is the ultimate dilemma we are faced with in the Zone,

It is no surprise the Reader is made to feel so paranoid in a novel rife with corporate conspiracy, much of which is highly researched and forms an impressive historical fiction aspect to this novel.
If those rambling through the Zone are the preterits moved by the They, than these corporations are one of the highest tangible link to the They we can see.
They decide who lives and dies, who is rich and from who wealth is gatekept, what we want to consume and how we consume it consumers need to feel a sense of sin and They exist in a realm where the War is simply a shuffling of power.
This war was never political at all, the politics was all theater, all just to keep the people distractedsecretly it was being dictated instead by the needs of technology.
by a conspiracy between human beings and techniques

Throughout the course of Gravitys Rainbow, we have endless looks into mans thirst for technology, which in itself is a thirst for death based on the nature of the technology, even when it is also a lifegiving force such as is the case of Pokler who had no life until the Rocket, and how this goes beyond the War itself.
Even the White Visitation simply uses the War as a reason for more funding, Mans role in technology is at the heart of every idea in this book, sitelinkEntropy is a measuring stick which this novel employs in a book that sets out to dissolve all rules, having a rule that is upheld highlights its importance, and all events and ideas serve to counterbalance each other in keeping with the conservation of energy with the preterits being the heat burned off.
As a quick aside, if I may, many of these preterits, Mexico and Jessicas romance or the concentration camp members their liberation was a banishment for example, are directly tied to the war and become a casualty of peace the budding romance there are some tearjerker lines, Pynchon really shows his soft side with them being the waste heat in a chemical reaction.
The Rockets, being the focal point of the book, are both life and death images as well as phallic metaphors while many of the literal phalluses in the book being used as metaphors for rockets.
Film plays another large role, with much of the book containing constant allusion to pop culture, and Der Springer believes he can reshape reality through film,

This struggle of life and death is something that must be embraced as two parts of a whole in this novel, much like man and machine become one with Gottfried and theRocket.
Life and death are found strung together all throughout the novel, yet, as critic sitelinkHarold Bloom points out in his sitelinkessays on Rainbow, in Pynchon's book so focused on the idea of Death, the Reader never actually experiences or witnesses one not one in all of thepages.
Many deaths are spoken of, some ambiguous like Tantivitys, and others referred to plainly such as Puddings note that shit is spoken of as a metaphor for death, shit is the presence of death, and he is made to ingest it during for him, not us a sexual peak as another way life and death bind together in the novel, but the camera of the prose, if you will, always cuts right before the Reader must be an active participant in the death.
Like Gottfried again, we know he dies, but because the comlink is only one way, we never can know the precise moment, Even Peters clubbing to the head cuts before the club can land, In this way, the novel is shown actually as a celebration of life, all the moments moving from:life to:death but never getting to the zero.
We are forever in the Zone, for better or for worse, But with the final words of the novel, nay, the final two words, he pulls us from oblivion back to the whole, We escape death by existing in the moments betweenand, and, ironically, in a book bent on annihilating structure and group alignment, he calls us all back into one large group: humanity.


Gravitys Rainbow is a massive novel that takes quite a bit of decoding and deboning in order to devour, But this is precisely what Pynchon wants and requires of us, This is a book that more or less requires a second reading just to grasp all that it has to say, the first is just a test of survival.
The agglomeration of ideas are too much to chew and savor on one trip, and there is so much ambiguity present that, like Joyces sitelinkUlysses, he intends to scholars to dissect and analyze this novel for years and years to come.
In the novel, the Zone members gather to become Kabbalists of the Rocket, to be scholarmagicians of the Zone, with somewhere in it a Text, to be picked to pieces, annotated, explicated, and masturbated till its all squeezed limp of its last drop.
This book is Pynchons Rocket, our Torahour darkness, which he cast forth into thes literary scene as a harbinger of destruction to all preconceived notions of literature.
Pynchon in this way is not all that unlike the Rocket launchers, hidden far away out of sight in his reclusiveness, avoiding photographic surveillance, sending his Rocket into a brave new world.
We, the Readers, are Gottfried strapped inside with fire beneath our feet as Pynchon, as Blicero, hurls us forth into the irreversible future,

Now everybody

/

'Each bird has his branch now, and each one is the Zone'

sitelink roll credits


I would also HIGHLY recommend the sitelinkA Gravity's Rainbow Companion: Sources and Contexts for Pynchon's Novel to any readers of this novel.
It was a huge help, especially with the pop culture allusions, Just be wary that it does occasionally give away plot elements and devices, sometimes long before they appear in the novel, and will practically double your time reading the actual book because there is so much information.


Also, I have to thank Stephen M's wonderful sitelinkgroup read for inspiring me to read the book, while doubling as a support group to get us all through this tome! The discussions and links there are extremely helpful and insightful.


Last, but certainly not least, I'd like to direct you to the amazing reviews of my reading buddies on this strange ride, sitelinkSteve, sitelinkIan, sitelinkJenn, sitelinkMark,Shan, sitelinkSean, sitelink Paquita, and many more to come!.