Thursday, October 24, 2019
The Identity of Thomas Pynchon :: Biography Biographies Essays
      The Identity of Thomas Pynchon           The identity of Thomas Pynchon is as elusive as the sticky, complex webs  of     meaning woven into his prose. As America's most "famous" hidden author,     Pynchon produces works which simultaneously deal with issues of     disappearance and meaning, of identity and nothingness in a fashion that     befuddles some and delights others. He speaks to the world from his     invisible pulpit, hiding behind a curtain of anonymity that safely     disguises his personality from the prying eyes of critics and fans alike.     Without a public author presence, readers are forced to derive the  identity     of the author instead from the author's actual works. When searching for     the identity of Pynchon, and indeed the notion of identity itself, the     novels of Thomas Pynchon offer an interesting starting point.           Questions of identity and meaning are shrouded beneath a veil of  conspiracy     in The Crying of Lot 49, Pynchon's second novel and his shortest.     Throughout the novel there are snatches of hidden agendas and mysterious     plans; it is a world run by Pierce Inverarity, a character who is dead  when     the novel opens yet remains an active presence throughout the work. This     seems to fit Pynchon's situation rather nicely as the ghostly moderator  of     a tired world, leading his main character Oedipa Maas on a quest for     meaning while blindly groping for clues about a conspiratorial mail  system     known only as the Trystero. Oedipa's quest echos the quest of everyone;  she     wishes for an identity that makes some sense within the framework of her     world. Thomas Pynchon, by erasing himself from the public sphere, is     questing for identity in his own right through his writings, letting Mrs.     Maas do the searching for him.           Little is known about Pynchon's life, and no one who knows him seems to  be     willing to add to the miniscule pile of information currently available     about him. His most recent published photograph dates back to 1953.     Beginning at the beginning, he was born on May 8, 1937 in Glen Cove, New     York. He attended Cornell University and received a degree in English in     1959. He worked at Boeing Company in Seattle as a technical writer until     his first novel V. appeared in 1963 (Gray 70). From that point onward,     Pynchon vanished from the public eye. Information about any part of     Pynchon's life after V.  					  The Identity of Thomas Pynchon  ::  Biography Biographies Essays        The Identity of Thomas Pynchon           The identity of Thomas Pynchon is as elusive as the sticky, complex webs  of     meaning woven into his prose. As America's most "famous" hidden author,     Pynchon produces works which simultaneously deal with issues of     disappearance and meaning, of identity and nothingness in a fashion that     befuddles some and delights others. He speaks to the world from his     invisible pulpit, hiding behind a curtain of anonymity that safely     disguises his personality from the prying eyes of critics and fans alike.     Without a public author presence, readers are forced to derive the  identity     of the author instead from the author's actual works. When searching for     the identity of Pynchon, and indeed the notion of identity itself, the     novels of Thomas Pynchon offer an interesting starting point.           Questions of identity and meaning are shrouded beneath a veil of  conspiracy     in The Crying of Lot 49, Pynchon's second novel and his shortest.     Throughout the novel there are snatches of hidden agendas and mysterious     plans; it is a world run by Pierce Inverarity, a character who is dead  when     the novel opens yet remains an active presence throughout the work. This     seems to fit Pynchon's situation rather nicely as the ghostly moderator  of     a tired world, leading his main character Oedipa Maas on a quest for     meaning while blindly groping for clues about a conspiratorial mail  system     known only as the Trystero. Oedipa's quest echos the quest of everyone;  she     wishes for an identity that makes some sense within the framework of her     world. Thomas Pynchon, by erasing himself from the public sphere, is     questing for identity in his own right through his writings, letting Mrs.     Maas do the searching for him.           Little is known about Pynchon's life, and no one who knows him seems to  be     willing to add to the miniscule pile of information currently available     about him. His most recent published photograph dates back to 1953.     Beginning at the beginning, he was born on May 8, 1937 in Glen Cove, New     York. He attended Cornell University and received a degree in English in     1959. He worked at Boeing Company in Seattle as a technical writer until     his first novel V. appeared in 1963 (Gray 70). From that point onward,     Pynchon vanished from the public eye. Information about any part of     Pynchon's life after V.  					    
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