Friday, April 27. 2007
Gravity's Rainbow Death Pact
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It's not really fair since I'm already 320 pages in, but I will definitely wait until May 1 before picking it back up. Because I want to wait as long as possible.
I'm in, and despite owning a copy of this book for over 15 years I will admit to never having finished it.
UNTIL NOW (tosses gauntless, kicks you dogs, calls you fuck off)
UNTIL NOW (tosses gauntless, kicks you dogs, calls you fuck off)
I have dusted off a never-used Livejournal account to record my progress.
You can always count on the unemployed to take up an ill-advised reading challenge. I just hope I can find a new copy without being gouged by Canadian prices.
I am totally in. I've finished V, which I figure must count for some kind of training. I still don't know Maltese, but I'm good at ignoring it. I'll pick up a copy tomorrow.
Hell yeah. I got a workday bracketed by 30 minute train rides. In it to win it.
Finally, a use for that useless Twitter account.
Finally, a use for that useless Twitter account.
I have already read Gravity's Rainbow but I might not finish Mason & Dixon until after May 1. If that is the case perhaps I will provide my thoughts.
If I'm masochistic enough to put myself through this, I'm gonna bring all my LJ friends down with me. I might as well bite the bullet and buy a paperback copy, because the .doc version that I started to read last night had some typographical errors (meaning more than one), and I definitely didn't want to have to fight two battles in this here endeavor.
I have decided I am in because I'd like to put the mental health benefits to use that I am paying for at work. If I can sit through MST3K movies and other such things (Jaws 4), how hard can this book be? My short attention span may have me losing (or winning?) though because.....oh, look, something shiny!
Hell, I'll give it a go. Nothing but time on my hands until a green card comes through.
I'm TOTALLY ready to dive in to this shit tome with a knife clenched between my teeth and surface on the other side, gasping for air before screaming SCREW YOU, THOMAS PYNCHON at the top of my lungs.
So, if everyone else is doing it, it must be fun? Right? Call me a sucker, I am going to do it too. If everyone jumped off a bridge, I'd be right behind them - or so it seems.
I am entering a world of pain, I can tell.
I am entering a world of pain, I can tell.
Probably better for my head than my last attempt to re-read a dimly recalled book.
Why the hell not? I even got a copy of it for Christmas. I pulled it out last night. The first six pages were slow but eminently enjoyable.
Fine, I'm in. It's just because I'm about to finish another book today and we have Gravity's Rainbow here.
I'm in, for a third reading. I expect to get hives from the bananas on this iteration as well.
I bought a copy tonight, and I guess that means I'm along for the ride.
(I was in Leah and Will's wedding, so I'm ok. I mean, I'm not a random crazy or anything. I'm a known crazy.)
(I was in Leah and Will's wedding, so I'm ok. I mean, I'm not a random crazy or anything. I'm a known crazy.)
(I posted a link to the wrong website last time - the link now goes to my LJ, where I will lament this greatly)
Feel free to add images to the flickr group if you're so inclined:
http://www.flickr.com/groups/gravitysrainbowdeathpact/
http://www.flickr.com/groups/gravitysrainbowdeathpact/
Prepare to have your behinds KICKED, people!
I want a tiny trophy!
I'll be tracking it on myspace (Leighanimal)...maybe. I might be too busy WIPING the FLOOR with youse guys!
I want a tiny trophy!
I'll be tracking it on myspace (Leighanimal)...maybe. I might be too busy WIPING the FLOOR with youse guys!
in my lj, where I will be tracking my progress, it says the following:
[May. 10th, 2007|06:01 pm]
ha! I still have the copy of gravity's rainbow that I thought I'd finally returned to schwern, a year late but a month too soon.
I dust it off. I'm in. I wanna be one of the cool kids. my verbal brain has become flabby from lack of gratuitously difficult use. crying of lot 49 once got me impossibly engaged to marry somebody interesting, and I want to see what the big one will do.
by the power of online community idea lag: death pact, activate!
[May. 10th, 2007|06:01 pm]
ha! I still have the copy of gravity's rainbow that I thought I'd finally returned to schwern, a year late but a month too soon.
I dust it off. I'm in. I wanna be one of the cool kids. my verbal brain has become flabby from lack of gratuitously difficult use. crying of lot 49 once got me impossibly engaged to marry somebody interesting, and I want to see what the big one will do.
by the power of online community idea lag: death pact, activate!
I've read it. It is actually not very hard. Keep a list of characters and their mentioned descriptions on a piece of paper for the first 100 pages (for reference), and then abandon it. Everything after "Beyond the Zero" is straight-forward.
I've read Gravity's Rainbow and I know many people who also have. It is a profound, intricate work of literature that leads to unending conversations between my friends and I, and in no way are Pynchon's books impossible to read. But I respect this group for its enthusiasm to read Pynchon's works. A whole year has passed, so I hope you have all completed your mission! (:
Im three quaters of the way through that mother, ill finish by the end of next week...
I am 400 pages into Against the Day. Started it when it came out.
I wanna finish it before Inherent Vice comes out.
I'm a slow reader (slow learner? heheh..mm) because I usually have 8 or so books going at a time, but I'll keep track of my progress at goodreads. y'all should friend me on there.
KAYTE
I wanna finish it before Inherent Vice comes out.
I'm a slow reader (slow learner? heheh..mm) because I usually have 8 or so books going at a time, but I'll keep track of my progress at goodreads. y'all should friend me on there.
KAYTE
I haven't worked on Against The Day in a while. Last time I was reading it was about a year ago when I was flying to Prague, so I probably don't remember what happens and need to restart.
Not sure I'm willing to pick up another Pynchon book for the shelf any time soon, though. That might be getting a little ridiculous.
Not sure I'm willing to pick up another Pynchon book for the shelf any time soon, though. That might be getting a little ridiculous.
Thomas Pynchon is a horrible writer. For some reason, he's a literary legend, and I've speculated why—50% of people who try to read Pynchon just put the book down because his shit simply doesn't make any fucking sense at all. The other 50% can't understand what they're reading, but feel it must be sophisticated, high-culture stuff if it goes over their dim-witted heads. They consider their act of reading Pynchon to be the intellectual's badge of honor, and they mention Pynchon-this, Pynchon-that at wine/cheese parties to impress other pseudo-intellectual friends. The fact is, Pynchon is no different that your average rambling loon on the street-corner, except that he types 100 WPM and somehow got a book deal. Of course, there's a place for Pynchon's stuff and probably always will be.
Or, I could be the idiot. Maybe I and the other contingent of folks who refused to read Pynchon's rambling run-on nonsense were simply not intelligent enough to understand his amazing, genius work. Maybe that's the case.
Or, I could be the idiot. Maybe I and the other contingent of folks who refused to read Pynchon's rambling run-on nonsense were simply not intelligent enough to understand his amazing, genius work. Maybe that's the case.
You actually got me curious about gravity rainbow. I am excited to read information about it now.
Thomas Pynchon is a horrible writer. For some reason, he's a literary legend, and I've speculated why—50% of people who try to read Pynchon just put the book down because his shit simply doesn't make any fucking sense at all. The other 50% can't understand what they're reading, but feel it must be sophisticated, high-culture stuff if it goes over their dim-witted heads. They consider their act of reading Pynchon to be the intellectual's badge of honor, and they mention Pynchon-this, Pynchon-that at wine/cheese parties to impress other pseudo-intellectual friends. The fact is, Pynchon is no different that your average rambling loon on the street-corner, except that he types 100 WPM and somehow got a book deal. Of course, there's a place for Pynchon's stuff and probably always will be.
Or, I could be the idiot. Maybe I and the other contingent of folks who refused to read Pynchon's rambling run-on nonsense were simply not intelligent enough to understand his amazing, genius work. Maybe that's the case.
Or, I could be the idiot. Maybe I and the other contingent of folks who refused to read Pynchon's rambling run-on nonsense were simply not intelligent enough to understand his amazing, genius work. Maybe that's the case.
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Tracked: Apr 29, 17:59
trackety track, don't talk back
Tracked: Apr 29, 18:22
Chris decided it would be fun to start a project to read Gravity’s Rainbow to completion. Having had a poor go at book reading for the past several months, I decided I should give this a try. Also, I like being included in things. Also, why th...
Tracked: Apr 29, 21:38
Gravity's Rainbow is novel by Thomas Pynchon that is widely held to be completely unreadable...
Tracked: May 01, 00:00
It's now May 1 where I am, so I'm going to go ahead and declare that the previously mentioned Gravity's Rainbow death pact is up and running. If you haven't picked up a copy yet, you still have time. Don't worry about getting started immediately since I