Why Pynchon Moved East

Steven Maas (CUTR) maas at cutr.eng.usf.edu
Tue Feb 11 10:50:19 CST 1997


This is hilarious. (I have to confess to a schadenfreude--I always look
forward to reading Steelhead posts--I'm just glad I haven't been a target. 
[Steelhead--my .edu address signifies only that I am a researcher--and at
a very plebeian university at that!]). Ms. Dillard sounds like a real
scheisskopf here. 

On Wed, 12 Feb 1997, Steelhead wrote:

> For several years Annie Dillard lived and taught college at Western
> Washington University in Bellingham, on Puget Sound north of Seattle. A few
> months ago, Dillard was speaking at a gathering for intellectuals and
> literary crit types in the Midwest. She answered a question on why she
> moved back East in this manner:
> 
> "The Northwest is no place for an intellectual woman. The men there were
> just wonderful, but the women out there had a kind of culture I couldn't
> share. They used chainsaws, they canned things, and they breast-fed.
> 
> "Out there I was suddenly a bluestocking. And all of these men were
> following me around everywhere I went. And the husbands and everybody, just
> this huge train of men behind me, and every once in a while I'd turn around
> and say: 'You guys...I'm an eastern woman; we're all this way.' But their
> women were so dull, you know, that the men would give up anything just to
> hear me for five minutes."
> 
> There it is. Tom Pynchon was an Annie Dillard groupie. Followed her back
> East, where all the women are INTELLECTUALS.
> 
> Steely
> 
> 




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