IV: Chapter 19 - page 343

kelber at mindspring.com kelber at mindspring.com
Mon Jan 4 14:16:41 CST 2010


You're probably right, Mark, though I'd prefer to believe Robin's joking explanation - a good Bossa Nova-playing sax is hard to find.

Still, though, I think there's got to be some significance in Pynchon's choice of Portola for the name of the club.  It's too close in meaning to Doc's last name, in the sense of "portal," for Pynchon not to have something specific in mind.

Laura
-----Original Message-----
>From: Mark Kohut <markekohut at yahoo.com>

>
>i think Pynchon saves Coy for almost religious, New Testament, JC reasons: "what you do for the least of them, etc. ", or whatever it is.
>
>I think Coy is 'saved' as one human exemplar of a lost preterite.....Doc's meaning in his life.....
>
>And for the child, the family---that later-works hopefulness---in TRP's oeuvre. 
>
>--- On Mon, 1/4/10, kelber at mindspring.com <kelber at mindspring.com> wrote:
>
>> From: kelber at mindspring.com <kelber at mindspring.com>
>> Subject: Re: IV: Chapter 19 - page 343
>> To: pynchon-l at waste.org
>> Date: Monday, January 4, 2010, 12:19 PM
>> The mention of the obscure ship also
>> echoes back to COL49 in the scene where Mike Fallopian's
>> describing the origins of the Peter Pinguid Society -- in
>> this case a Russian ship was involved.
>> 
>> Wondering if there's any significance between the Portola
>> club and Sportello.  By virtue of even sitting in this
>> power-bastion, negotiating, is Doc passing through some
>> private portal -- in effect becoming an auxiliary member of
>> the Golden Fang by doing business with them, even if it's to
>> save a life?  Also, I've never understood Doc's
>> personal zealotry in protecting Coy and his family. 
>> Stealing heroin from and negotiating with the GF seems an
>> excessively dangerous and risky undertaking to protect
>> someone Doc barely knows, and a pretty morally compromised
>> person at that.
>> 
>> Laura
>> 
>> -----Original Message-----
>> >From: Robin Landseadel <robinlandseadel at comcast.net>
>> >
>> >Doc is as struck [in his way] by this painting of the
>> commencement of  
>> >the Portola Expidition as Oedipa was struck by Varo's
>> indices of  
>> >tears. Again and again throughout the story our stony
>> hero asks  
>> >questions about what might have been if only . . .
>> >
>> >http://tinyurl.com/ydeg347
>> >
>> >    The Portola expedition, led by
>> Gaspar de Portolà from July 14,
>> >     1769 to January 24, 1770,
>> was the first known recorded
>> >    attempt by Spain to explore Alta
>> California by land.[1] The
>> >    purpose of the expedition was to
>> secure bases in Upper
>> >    California before the Russians.[2]
>> The plan was to establish a
>> >    base in the Port of Monterey (now
>> Monterey, California) as
>> >    described by Sebastián Vizcaíno.
>> The expedition consisted of
>> >    64 men in all, and approximately 200
>> horses and mules. The
>> >    expedition started at the Presidio
>> of San Diego on July 14 and
>> >    returned on January 24, 1770 —
>> failing to recognize Monterey
>> >    Bay.
>> >
>> >http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portola_expedition
>> >
>> 
>
>
>




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