The two worked together on some unrealized film projects, parts of which made their way into the novels Vineland and Inherent Vice.

Dave Monroe against.the.dave at gmail.com
Thu Aug 13 11:56:27 CDT 2015


PYNCHON, Thomas

The Crying of Lot 49

Philadelphia, Lippincott, (1966). Pynchon's second novel, winner of
the Rosenthal Award from the American Academy and Institute of Arts
and Letters, and the most overtly political, and paranoid, of
Pynchon's novels. Chosen by David Pringle as one of the hundred best
novels of Modern Fantasy. This copy is signed by Pynchon, done as a
gift for a film student from Manhattan Beach during the time Pynchon
was writing Gravity's Rainbow. The two worked together on some
unrealized film projects, parts of which made their way into the
novels Vineland and Inherent Vice. Minor bowing to boards, sunning to
board edges and foxing to spine cloth; a very good copy in a near fine
dust jacket with a touch of wear to the spine extremities. Pynchon's
signature is one of the most elusive of all 20th century American
authors, especially on copies of his first three books. A nice copy
with good provenance. [#031746]

http://lopezbooks.com/item/31746/
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