Jesse’s Reviews > V. > Status Update
Jesse
is on page 50 of 547
I love this. I am reminded of all of the tangents of Catch-22 but this novel is more bewildering because the first part we have followed Profane in his meandering march into depression and now, in following Rachel, have just encountered Stencil and thus the first mention of the titular concept, V. There is A LOT to unpack, flavored by gross Naval excesses and New York Jewish culture.
— Sep 18, 2024 04:22PM
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Jesse’s Previous Updates
Jesse
is on page 507 of 547
“…some of us do go nowhere and can con ourselves into believing it to be somewhere: it is a kind of talent and objections to it are rare but even at that captious.”
— Sep 23, 2024 05:21PM
Jesse
is on page 471 of 547
Chapter Sixteen
Sahha
I don’t know where this is going but I am dreading Profane’s slow dissolution and the apparent termination of his relationship with Rachel.
— Sep 23, 2024 02:53PM
Sahha
I don’t know where this is going but I am dreading Profane’s slow dissolution and the apparent termination of his relationship with Rachel.
Jesse
is on page 461 of 547
This section has the dissolution of Profane’s relationship with Rachel as Pynchon slowly pushes him together with Stencil and Paola… and another deeply uncomfortable chapter, “V. In Love”, which dwells more on Pynchon’s decadence and in this a character study of a ballerina who was molested by her father and effectively disowned by her mother and trauma and psychosexual theory and
— Sep 23, 2024 09:49AM
Jesse
is on page 407 of 547
Never in a million years would I have guessed the plot twist with Paola.
The Malta narrative is the confession of Paola’s father, confusing for its insistence on referring to a handful of progressive personalities of Fausto as he looks back at epochs in his life. It is a tired, world-weary story of the siege of Malta and further develops Pynchon’s feelings on decadence and “inanimateness”.
— Sep 22, 2024 07:59PM
The Malta narrative is the confession of Paola’s father, confusing for its insistence on referring to a handful of progressive personalities of Fausto as he looks back at epochs in his life. It is a tired, world-weary story of the siege of Malta and further develops Pynchon’s feelings on decadence and “inanimateness”.
Jesse
is on page 350 of 547
The introduction of Pig seems to be a confounding factor for Profane’s journey but it is also by way of his amorous pursuit a sneaky way of reminding us that Paola is supposed to be in this social circle as characters constantly wonder where Paola is and what she is doing. We find out, leading into chapter 11, what she has been up to, and to no one’s surprise Stencil’s suspicions are somewhat founded.
— Sep 22, 2024 09:51AM
Jesse
is on page 304 of 547
oh god no
this starts out as a description of a German engineer in post-WW2 west Africa during a rebellion and goes into a dark, dark place as Foppl’s story of the genocide and enslavement of the West African people 18 years prior intrudes into Mondaugen’s careening through the debauched German house party, a sort of 120 Days of Sodom. I’m, I don’t even
— Sep 19, 2024 09:26PM
this starts out as a description of a German engineer in post-WW2 west Africa during a rebellion and goes into a dark, dark place as Foppl’s story of the genocide and enslavement of the West African people 18 years prior intrudes into Mondaugen’s careening through the debauched German house party, a sort of 120 Days of Sodom. I’m, I don’t even
Jesse
is on page 250 of 547
The episode in Italy feels more fully-realized but still maddening in what Vheissu is or isn’t. It’s a great, multi-layered story and the bits of Mantessi relinquishing the beauty of the Venus and the dalliance between Evan and the enigmatic, intrigue-seeking Victoria, and Evan’s father’s passionate pleadings are great.
— Sep 19, 2024 01:42PM
Jesse
is on page 200 of 547
Vheissu is the same and yet another thing entirely, another romantic intrigue set in the past and involving the British Foreign Office (and Victoria) yet again. The description of Vheissu, the elder’s interpretation of it, reminds me of Profane’s more moody musings, like his country of Rachel, of alienation.
— Sep 19, 2024 10:17AM
Jesse
is on page 150 of 547
A thorough description of a nose job, including the traumatic story of the why of the plastic surgeon; hunting alligators in the sewers, where an insane priest had once tried to convert the rats to Roman Catholicism while simultaneously eating them (and falling in love with V.eronica!!); Stencil I believe is shot as if he is an alligator; and Much Much More.
— Sep 19, 2024 08:08AM
Jesse
is on page 100 of 547
This section elaborates more on Rachel’s social circle and then plunges into Stencil’s quest for V. For a moment I thought that he was literally an undercover spy in each of the segments of Chapter III; now I can see that he is imagining the event from the POV of “impressions” of people who may or may not have existed. The political intrigue of English spies in Egypt is a fascinating wrinkle to the overall.
— Sep 19, 2024 05:42AM

