Synopses & Reviews
It's Christmas Eve, 1955, and ex-seaman Benny Profane a schlemihl and human yo-yo is back in Norfolk, Virginia, with some old Navy buddies and Paola Maijstral, the enigmatic barmaid from Valletta, Malta. By January, he and Paola are in New York City with a group of wastrels self-styled The Whole Sick Crew; and Profane roams the streets and the sewers (hunting alligators) of a city that seems to just bounce him back and forth.
In the meantime, Herbert Stencil questing son of a dead British Foreign Office man has been, since 1945, hunting for the utterly mysterious V., an unknown (perhaps unknowable) woman whom Stencil knows only from an entry in his late father's journals: "Florence, April, 1899...There is more behind and inside V. than any of us had suspected. Not who, but what: what is she?" And he knows, he has intuited," that she'd been connected...with one of those grand conspiracies or foretastes of Armageddon which seemed to have captivated all diplomatic sensibilities in the years preceding the Great War. V. and a conspiracy."
By January 1956, Stencil's search has brought him to New York City, where his and Benny Profane's paths inevitably cross. From that point of crossing, Thomas Pynchon's first novel takes readers on a wild and wonderful tour of the twentieth century and of contemporary America. Record-company and armaments executives (Roony Winsome and Clayton " Bloody" Chiclitz) jostle on these pages with British spies and Nazi rocket builders (Eric Bongo-Shaftsbury and Kurt Mondaugen), dentists and plastic surgeons (Dudley Eigenvalue and Shale Shoenmaker) rub metaphoric elbows with street gangs and jazzmusicians (the Playboys and McClintic Sphere). And all the while, the world has either run down into meaninglessness or is run by a vast conspiracy that imposes a single absolute meaning on everyone.
Review
"[L]eaves the imagination spent and the mind reeling." New York Herald Tribune
Review
"[A] brilliant and turbulent first novel." George Plimpton, New York Times Book Review
Synopsis
V. remains a popular literary classic by one of America's great modernists. Through a cryptic entry in his father's dairy, Henry Stencil becomes obsessed with discovering the identity of V., in a quest that leads him through the dizzying world of characters. V. is a wild, macabre tale of the twentieth century and of two men (one looking for something he has lost; the other never had too much to lose and isn't looking for it)-and V., the unknown lady of the title, who may be somebody's mother, somebody's mistress, or the world gone mad with despair.
Synopsis
This work may well stand as one of the very best works of the century. --Atlantic Review
Acclaimed writer Thomas Pynchon's wild, macabre tale of the twentieth century and of two men--one looking for something he has lost, the other with nothing much to lose--and V., the unknown woman of the title.
Synopsis
Winner of the coveted William Faulkner Foundation First Novel Award in 1963, "V." remains a popular literary classic by one of America's great modernists. "This work may well stand as one of the very best works of the century."-- "Atlantic Review" "This work may well stand as one of the very best works of the century." "--Atlantic Review"
"Filled with wild humor, inventive wordplay and a darkly imaginative power." "--Philadelphia Inquirer"
Synopsis
The wild, macabre tale of the twentieth century and of two men -- one looking for something he has lost, the other with nothing much to lose -- and "V.," the unknown woman of the title.
About the Author
Thomas Pynchon was born in 1937. His books include The Crying of Lot 49, Gravity's Rainbow, Vineland, and Mason & Dixon.