more prolegomena: early 1963
Mark Kohut
markekohut at yahoo.com
Tue Jun 8 15:23:40 CDT 2010
Yes....once a company is absorbed by another, when any historical continuity of knowledge is gone---and
it could be as good as gone even without one swallowing another...all that is left are visible signs...(wow, I sound like
a pynchon interpreter!).....such as the naked copyright page.....
What I mean is, is that 1961 copyright in the Lippincott edition, which was to signal the copyright protection of Under the Rose
in The Noble Savage was now assumed by the next production manager to apply to the whole hardcover......it is in my Harper
edition too.............
In V.'s publishing history, Lippincott had no paperback line so did sell/license rights. Usually seven years and renewable.
David, that World Cat listing is a continuation of the above mistake...
----- Original Message ----
From: "kelber at mindspring.com" <kelber at mindspring.com>
To: pynchon-l at waste.org
Sent: Tue, June 8, 2010 12:12:21 PM
Subject: Re: more prolegomena: early 1963
So apparently, the Harper Perennial edition also mistyped the original Lippincott publication year as 1961!
Laura
-----Original Message-----
>From: Thomas Beshear <tbeshear at insightbb.com>
>Sent: Jun 8, 2010 12:05 PM
>To: kelber at mindspring.com, pynchon-l at waste.org
>Subject: Re: more prolegomena: early 1963
>
>Grabbed my old Bantam paperback edition of V. Bantam, in those days, gave
>detailed info on the copyright page about different printings. For people
>wondering about V.'s publication, I thought it might be helpful. Here's what
>I find:
>
>V. A Bantam Book / published by arrangement with J. B. Lippincott Company
>PRINTING HISTORY
>Lippincott edition published March 1963. 2nd printing March 1963, 3rd
>printing April 1963, 4th printing, June 1963
>Bantam edition published March 1964. 2nd printing, March 1964. 3rd printing,
>March 1967, 4th printing October 1968, 5th printing (which is the one I
>have).
>
>
>----- Original Message -----
>From: <kelber at mindspring.com>
>To: <pynchon-l at waste.org>
>Sent: Tuesday, June 08, 2010 11:31 AM
>Subject: Re: more prolegomena: early 1963
>
>
>Was '63 the first paperback edition? I'd erroneously thought that was the
>publishing date. Feb. 1961 was pretty soon after he left college, wasn't
>it?
>
>Two other things that might have informed the writing of V.:
>
>Eichmann was captured in May, 1960, although his trial didn't begin until
>1961. Did this set off ruminations in Pynchon on the earlier Herero
>genocide?
>
>Then there was this article, published in Astronautics, in Sept. '60. It's
>the article that coins the term "cyborg." Too late to have influenced V.?
>But expressing ideas that were possibly floating around?
>
>http://www.scribd.com/doc/2962194/Cyborgs-and-Space-Clynes-Kline?autodown=pdf
>
>If not yet called cyborgs, robots and ideas of robotic limbs, etc. must have
>been chatted about at Boeing. Pynchon might well have read Astronautics and
>other similar publications while on the job.
>
>Laura
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>>From: Mark Kohut <markekohut at yahoo.com>
>>Sent: Jun 7, 2010 4:50 PM
>>To: pynchon -l <pynchon-l at waste.org>
>>Subject: more prolegomena: early 1963
>>
>>V. was evidently published by February 1 of 1961...since it was on that
>>date that it won the Wm Faulkner Foundation Award for First Novel. Other
>>winners:
>>Cormac McCarthy, Orchard Keeper 1965...Rbt Coover, Origin of the
>>Brunists....Larry Wiowode 1969, What I'm Going to Do, I Think?....others I
>>looked up and have already forgotten.
>>
>>Time Mag's review @3/15.....NYTimes, April 21: George, "Paris Review",
>>Plimpton praises. See the wiki. No other major newspaper, magazine reviews
>>it seems...Tanner, Kermode, others, later and elsewhere it seems.
>>
>>
>> * March 22 – The Beatles release their first album Please Please Me.
>>
>>When the book was 'going to press':
>>January 14 George C. Wallace becomes governor of Alabama. In his inaugural
>>speech, he defiantly proclaims "segregation now, segregation tomorrow, and
>>segregation forever!"[1][2]
>>
>>January 28 – African American student Harvey Gantt enters Clemson
>>University in South Carolina, the last U.S. state to hold out against
>>racial integration.
>>
>>February 11 – The CIA's Domestic Operations Division is created.
>> * Fedruary 11 Sylvia Plath committed suicide.
>> *
>> * February 19 – The publication of Betty Friedan's The Feminine Mystique
>> launches the reawakening of the Women's Movement in the United States as
>> women's organizations and consciousness-raising groups spread.
>>
>>
>> * March
>> * Iron Man debuts in Marvel Comics's Tales of Suspense #39.
>> *
>>March 18 – Gideon v. Wainwright: The U.S. Supreme Court rules that the poor
>>must have lawyers.
>>
>>March : Letter from the Birmingham Jail written by MLKjr.
>>
>>
>>
>
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