V--2nd, half-way

Mark Kohut markekohut at yahoo.com
Mon Oct 18 17:11:03 CDT 2010


No, maybe i narrowed your issuing......?

I agree that this reading is showing me more GR connections than ever...


----- Original Message ----
From: Robin Landseadel <robinlandseadel at comcast.net>
To: pynchon-l at waste.org
Sent: Mon, October 18, 2010 4:17:19 PM
Subject: Re: V--2nd, half-way

Oh, I'm sorry, I must have confused the issue.

I'm not Cabalistically pursuing any numerological meaning in the number of the 
page* or concerned with the exact word count that would produce the exact center 
of the book. I know some commentators have gone so far to do such things. I 
pretty much am looking for the center of the story, I'm not taking it any 
further than that.

My point is that the "dead center" of "V." reads like something out of Gravity's 
Rainbow. So much that is important in these scenes is important to Gravity's 
Rainbow as well. That's one of my biggest takeaways from this group read, so far 
-- how much GR and "V." have in common in this chapter. If someone is gazing 
into the intense darkness at the core of Gravity's Rainbow, one might become a 
touch entranced by that  darkness, and chapter nine of "V." is about as close as 
were going to get to that feeling in any other book by any writer, Pynchon 
included.

On Oct 18, 2010, at 12:43 PM, David Morris wrote:

> On Mon, Oct 18, 2010 at 2:14 PM, Robin Landseadel
> <robinlandseadel at comcast.net> wrote:
>> I'm taking the page count of my copy -- the Harper Perennial Modern Classics 
>>edition -- and dividing by two.
> 
> At which point you proceed to completely ignore Rich's point:
> 
>>> but the original novel was 492 pgs making pg. 246 the middle, no?
> 
> Restating the point:  Wouldn't the original page-count be the
> "significant" one, assuming the author intended any significance to a
> mid-point point?  Obviously he had no way of knowing what future
> edition pagination would be, so isn't your mid-point thesis severely
> undercut unless you use the first-edition versions of each?  And even
> then, there's no way Pynchon could have known how the pagination would
> play out, unless he specifically indicated how to lay out the printed
> pages.
> 
> David Morris

*I'd say that's much more applicable to "Against the Day."


      



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