The Crying of Lot 49
discussion
Crying of Lot 49 is Pynchon dealing with JFKs assassination. What do you think?
date
newest »



Your looking for something you dont know if it even exits and then you see the signs everywhere.
So perhaps it is a book about those people making up theories about the assassination

I've only happened to have read his first three novels, and so far I haven't found one that deviates much from that blueprint.
Each one starts out relatively coherent, and then the plot and the characters disintegrate into a million different pieces.
I think you may be reading too much into things, when you suggest that the novel is about the assassination of a posthumously deified former president.



And no, nothing to do with posthumously deifying anybody, but with the assassination conspiracy theories.
Brings to mind the Nicholas Branch character in Delillo's 'Libra', whose job it is to sift though all the evidence gathered by the investigation into the assassination, and he ends up having a nervous breakdown. Like Oedipa.

I do think, however, that this sort of thematic material can be very easily applied to the JFK assassination.

Paranoia is a big part of the book, as is the theme of lack of communication, embracing the absurd, and the adverse effects of holistic thinking. Every time she gets another clue or strips away a layer of the mystery, she actually just multiplies the questions and understands even less.
But I think it's just as much about JFK's assassination as it is about who's going to buy the stamps. So, not at all.
all discussions on this book
|
post a new topic
http://www.ottosell.de/pynchon/magice...
and it certainly gives the book some depth, for those who came away from it wondering: what was that all about?