Saunders on TRP

Keith Davis kbob42 at gmail.com
Wed Mar 26 06:15:25 CDT 2014


This is great . Thanks.


Www.innergroovemusic.com

> On Mar 25, 2014, at 10:42 PM, David Morris <fqmorris at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> I think Pynchon has some deep level of Buddhist understanding going back to V & GR.  The excluded middle and the middle way are so obviously aligned. Paradox is Pynchon and Zen. Slothrup found the Tao and his dissolving away is a common feat of enlightened masters.  Pynchon made Slothrup into a Buddha.  Deal with it.
> 
> David Morris
> 
>> On Tuesday, March 25, 2014, Markekohut <markekohut at yahoo.com> wrote:
>> I don't ever remember reading this,.....thanks so much...so GOOD. 
>> " if it is in the world, it can go in the book"....so good re BE later, yes......as well as all the love of the natural world,that is in ATD.
>> 
>> Saunders calls himself,a Buddhist, ya know? 
>> 
>> Sent from my iPad
>> 
>>> On Mar 25, 2014, at 4:44 PM, Monte Davis <montedavis49 at gmail.com> wrote:
>>> 
>>> Just ran across it again, Bookforum 2005:
>>> 
>>> George Saunders I don't think anyone has gotten closer than Thomas Pynchon to summoning the real audacity and insanity and scope of the American mind, as reflected in the American landscape. I read Pynchon all out of order, starting with Vineland, and I still remember the shock of pleasure I got at finally seeing the America I knew—strange shops and boulevards, built over former strange shops and former boulevards, all laid out there in valleys and dead-end forests, heaped on top of Indian cemeteries, peopled with nut jobs and hustlers and moral purists—actually present in a novel, and present not only in substance but in structure and language that both used and evoked the unruly, muscular complexity of the world itself.
>>> 
>>> In Pynchon, anything is fair game—if it is in the world, it can go in the book. To me there is something Buddhist about this approach, which seems to say that since the world is capable of producing an infinity of forms, the novel must be capable of accommodating an infinite number of forms. All aesthetic concerns (style, form, structure) answer this purpose: Let in the world.
>>> 
>>> This is why Pynchon is our biggest writer, the gold standard of that overused word inclusiveness: No dogma or tidy aesthetic rule or literary fashion is allowed to prefilter the beautiful data streaming in. Everything is included. No inclination of the mind is too small or large or frightening. The result is gorgeous madness, which does what great literature has always done—reminds us that there is a world out there that is bigger than us and worthy of our utmost humility and attention.
>>> 
>>> I have often felt that we read to gain some idea of what God would say about us if someone were to ask Him what we're like. Pynchon says, through the vast loving catalogue he has made, that we are Excellent but need to be watched closely. He says there is no higher form of worship than the loving (i.e., madly attentive) observation of that-which-is, a form of prayer of which Pynchon's work is our highest example.
>>> 
>>> http://www.bookforum.com/archive/sum_05/pynchon.html
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