TRTR - Chapter VI au revoir
Mark Kohut
markekohut at yahoo.com
Sun Jun 5 19:30:02 CDT 2011
No one can say it like this but Alice and I like this
too except to say Otto is a real creation because he
is an admixture of some good and bad, mostly not so good
since this work is a "vicious but hilarious' satire of human
bad shit.....
Look at Otto in the chapter we have just read when after angling
to get Esme into bed, love nor much of a relationship even part of it,
he does get emotionally hit with her face..............
----- Original Message ----
From: alice wellintown <alicewellintown at gmail.com>
To: pynchon -l <pynchon-l at waste.org>
Sent: Sun, June 5, 2011 7:03:39 PM
Subject: Re: TRTR - Chapter VI au revoir
James Wood says that there is nothing harder than the creation of
fictional characters. Of course, diamonds are harder and dirt is
tougher and a chocolate Jesus is sweeter, but Wood is talking about
fiction and how it works, so...and itz a itzy bitzy book...and
well...we get his point. Sorry you didn't get mines, what it that I
likes Otto well enough sure as fiction but he sure do stink up the
joint. What WG does well, and the list is quite long, is to animate
his portraits. And he do the policeman's voice so sick. Wood talks
about Conrad writing longer works to try to convince the reader of his
characters. He kept adding more and more, like a painter with a brush.
Ever painted? Well, after a while more makes a mess of less and you
got to think about a new canvas. An unfinished man, as Yeats calls his
portrait of the young artist, is not like a character of fiction. What
finishes a character can be nothing more than an ashplant or a dream
about something beautiful. Otto is finished and trim. His sling and
his jottings in shorthanded theatrics, his fictions, he reminds me of
the sad eyed lady of Dylan's Lowlands but on a whole nuther beveled
bleed.
He ain't mo friend of mine.
But I like to see him kick just the same.
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