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« #23 - Willful Creatures, by Aimee Bender | Main | #25 - King Rat, by China Miéville » #24 - Slow Learner, by Thomas Pynchon
The biggest issue with most of these stories is that that young apprentice Pynchon had absolutely no ear for prose. Their style is clumsy, jumping between baroque infodump and stark minimalism to no apparent purpose. Important details are often vague (and the prose during the only treatment of sex in these stories isn't just purple, it's Imperial Purple, and Pynchon is justifiably embarrassed by it). Narratives often stall or fall apart or simply end before they have made any kind of point. "Entropy" shows stylistic and thematic potential; the prose isn't exactly clear, and is from time to time surrealist, but the characters are interesting and though, just as the introduction said, the story doesn't need the entropic imagery running under everything, it's still good, functional, well-made imagery. "The Secret Integration" is a bit clumsy at the end and perhaps feels a bit like a morality play, but by this time there's no question at all that Pynchon is well on his way to becoming not only a compelling stylist, but a master craftsman. The story is rich and convincing, the characters real in a way they weren't in the other stories, and the various themes and plot elements were all given exactly the weight they deserved. Pynchon himself called it a journeyman story, since V. was already out earlier that year, and he was on his way. Journeyman story it is. Watch out for more Pynchon in the future, but now it's time for King Rat, by China Miéville. Posted by August on 04.25.07 at 1:47 PM | Comments (0) CommentsPost a comment
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