does AtD rock?
Henry
scuffling at gmail.com
Tue Jul 10 16:41:39 CDT 2007
Could anyone, as of yet, had the time to first read AtD and then GR, and get
much out of them both? I may not be a slow learner, but I guess that I must
be a slow reader.
Henry M
http://www.urdomain.us/scuffling.htm
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-pynchon-l at waste.org [mailto:owner-pynchon-l at waste.org] On Behalf
Of Ya Sam
Sent: Tuesday, July 10, 2007 2:28 PM
To: kelber at mindspring.com; pynchon-l at waste.org
Subject: Re: does AtD rock?
I hope everything's fine now, Bekah.
My first reading of GR not only blew my mind, but also showed how pathetic,
ignorant and narrow-minded I was (maybe I'm still is, but Pynchon showed me
some ways to improve myself). If simply becoming a Pynchon reader requires
such an effort (I had read Ulysses before and thought so high of myself),
then what does it take to write like Pynchon? I hope he didn't sell his soul
to the Devil.
BTW, there are folks around who first read AtD and then GR, so I think it
would be interesting to learn about their opinion of GR after AtD and not
the other way round. If I'm not mistaken, Mark is one of those.
>
>I only got around to reading GR a few years ago, when I was a middle-aged,
>unemployed
>pathetic failure with no illusions about anything. Yes, it totally rocked,
>blew my mind, etc.
>ATD is good to read if you love Pynchon, but it's not the life-altering
>experience that GR was.
>
>Laura
>
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