Throwback Thursday: January 2011

Throwback Thursday

#ThrowbackThursday

Revisiting what I posted 10 years ago,
following the idea I found at The Chocolate Lady’s Book Review Blog
(click on this link or the logo to see where the idea started from,
and to post the link to your own post).

On the first Thursday of the month available on my site,
I’m planning to post about the previous month, 10 years before.

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So today, I’ll be revisiting January 2011.

I published 22 posts, 8 of these were reviews.
The two that got most views are

  lost-city-of-z the crying of lot 49

Click on the covers to see why.
I  updated these posts

Of the 8 books reviewed that month, The Lost City of Z is still the one I remember most. I haven’t watched the movie yet, should I?

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WHAT DO YOU THINK
ABOUT THIS THROWBACK THURSDAY POST?

WHAT ELSE WOULD YOU LIKE ME TO INCLUDE?
HAVE YOU READ THESE BOOKS?
Next post will be on March 4

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The Crying of Lot 49

The Crying of Lot 49

by

Thomas PYNCHON

152 p.

Read for 2 Reading Challenges:

 What’s in a name
http://whatsinaname4.blogspot.com/
Category Number

And for My own reading challenge

Category: Book published in 1966

This is a re-read. I read it back in France in 1984 or 1985, preparing the Concours d’Entrée à L’Ecole Normale Supérieure, specialty English. This work was on the programme to prepare for the Concours.
I remember writing a long essay on the theme of entropy in this book. Reading the book again today, I marvel at how smart I must have been one day, lol.
Too bad I tossed that essay. Oh, and part of the Concours was also to translate chunks of it!
Today, the book appears totally obscure to me, and I have to say, I would have abandoned it if it had not been on my list for 2 Reading Challenges.

It is about Oedipa Maas who is unexpectedly named as the executor of her late lover’s will. Trying to understand why, and connect with his company, she discovers that his estate is mysteriously connected with an underground organization, or is it really? One never surely knows if this is not rather part of her imagination. There’s also a lot of LSD stuff in this book, though she does not seem to be doing anything with it herself.

The book covers the time until the very minute when she sits at the auction. She just learned that a mysterious man, coming out of nowhere, will be present and the most important bidder. She has no clue who he is, and you will not have any either, as the book ends right there, just before the beginning of the auction. So you’ve spent 152 pages in the unknown, always wondering what, where, and why, and you don’t know more at the end than at the beginning.

Lots of passages sound almost like written under the influence, at least to me, though some critics say it more nicely and assert that Pynchon is imitating James Joyce’s style. Not so sure about that one – I did read also Ulysses for that Concours!

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Thomas Ruggles Pynchon, Jr. (born May 8, 1937) is an American novelist. For his most praised novel, Gravity’s Rainbow, Pynchon received the National Book Award, and is regularly cited as a contender for the Nobel Prize for Literature. Pynchon is a MacArthur Fellow noted for his dense and complex novels, and both his fiction and non-fiction writings encompass a vast array of subject matter, styles and themes, including (but not limited to) the fields of history, science, and mathematics.

Hailing from Long Island, Pynchon spent two years in the United States Navy and earned an English degree from Cornell University. After publishing several short stories in the late 1950s and early 1960s, he began composing the novels for which he is best known: V. (1963), The Crying of Lot 49 (1966), Gravity’s Rainbow (1973), and Mason & Dixon (1997). Pynchon is also known for being reclusive; very few photographs of him have ever been published, and rumors about his location and identity have been circulated since the 1960s.

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