Was Heller & V. thread

Rev'd Seventy-Six revd.76 at gmail.com
Mon May 13 23:52:13 CDT 2013


Old hat to everybody but you'n'I. Just found out about Candida last
week. Wotta name, wotta nemesis! I'd been wondering how all those foax
in the 'Life of P.' documentary came to be in possession of so much of
his correspondence... The *stones* on that lady!

On 5/14/13, Jeff Sunbury <jsunbury at gmail.com> wrote:
> This is probably old news for P-listers from the NYTimes
> (1998)<http://www.nytimes.com/1998/03/04/books/pynchon-s-letters-nudge-his-mask.html>
> :
>
> 120 letters that Mr. Pynchon sent to his agent, Candida Donadio, from 1963
> to 1982. In 1984, Carter Burden, the businessman, politician and arts
> patron, purchased the group of letters from Ms. Donadio (through a dealer,
> Ralph Sipper, of Joseph the Provider Books in Santa Barbara, Calif.) for
> $45,000, making it the most expensive item in Mr. Burden's valuable
> American literature collection.
>
>
> On Mon, May 13, 2013 at 11:03 PM, Jeff Sunbury <jsunbury at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> from Unscrewing the navel allusion:
>>  "Fast Learner: The Typescript of Pynchon's V. at the Harry Ransom Center
>> in
>> Austin,"<http://web.ebscohost.com/ehost/pdfviewer/pdfviewer?sid=a6dc7fe6-bd13-4cbc-bcaf-028c269a3522%40sessionmgr104&vid=2&hid=122>
>> by Luc
>> Herman and John Krafft describes how Cork Smith, after "Low-lands" was
>> published by New World/Lippincott in March 1960, agreed to contract
>> Pynchon
>> for an as yet unwritten novel (V.) and backdated the contract to Jan.
>> 1960.
>> While Candida and her cockatoo lurked in the shadows in a haze of
>> cigarette
>> smoke.
>>
>>
>> On Mon, May 13, 2013 at 9:51 PM, Jeff Sunbury <jsunbury at gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> Correction: When "Catch-18" was published New World Writing owned by New
>>> American Library's Mentor imprint (1951-1960),
>>>
>>>
>>> On Mon, May 13, 2013 at 9:40 PM, Jeff Sunbury <jsunbury at gmail.com>
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> New World Writing <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_World_Writing> is
>>>> one connecting link btwn. Heller and Pynchon. It was owned by
>>>> Lippincott. The initial chapter  oof Catch-22 was published in 1955 as
>>>> "Catch-18", in Issue 7 of New World Writing. Heller's agent was "the
>>>> famous
>>>> Candida Donadio". Pynchon's short story "Low-lands" was first published
>>>> in Issue 16 of New World Writing in March 1960. And Lippincott is where
>>>> Corlies Smith and Faith Sale worked and co-edited V. When sorting out
>>>> the
>>>> mind-set of writers/novelists during the pre-Kennedy Assassination
>>>> years, I
>>>> would add Robert
>>>> Stone<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Stone_(novelist)> who
>>>> wrote a defining memoir/autobiography titled Prime Green: Remembering
>>>> the
>>>> Sixties (2007). Stone was born in Brooklyn the same year as Pynchon,
>>>> dropped out of high school, did a 4-year stint in the Navy (1954-8),
>>>> did
>>>> some hack writing in New York and New Orleans, ending up at Stanford
>>>> where
>>>> he rubbed elbows with Ken Kesey. He was literally and figuratively "on
>>>> the
>>>> bus (Furthur)" with Kesey and Neal Cassady and other ne'er-do-wells.
>>>> Prime
>>>> Green refers to a beach in Mexico which may be a bit like Paradise. The
>>>> memoir and the generation climaxes in 1969, the year of Neil Armstrong
>>>> and
>>>> Charles Manson before Stone went to Vietnam as a correspondent..
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Mon, May 13, 2013 at 8:21 PM, Mark Kohut
>>>> <markekohut at yahoo.com>wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Heller remarked latet in his career that at the time he was writing
>>>>> Catch--22, Kesey was writing
>>>>> Cuckoo's Nest, Pynchon was writing V. , Donleavy, The Ginger Man and
>>>>> Vonnegut Catch--22.
>>>>> He knew of the work of none of the others; he had never heard that any
>>>>> of them knew of each other then.
>>>>>
>>>>> It was the sensibility turn somehow, he implies.
>>>>> The biography author quotes Bruce Jay Friedman about this time. "In
>>>>> college, all the courses I took were
>>>>> about *what's wrong." *Associatively implying that their work tackled
>>>>> that.
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>
>


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