The first novel by the incomparable Thomas Pynchon.
Thomas Pynchon is the author of V., The Crying of Lot 49, Gravity's Rainbow, Slow Learner (a collection of short stories), Vineland, Mason & Dixon, Against the Day, Inherent Vice and Bleeding Edge. He received the National Book Award for Gravity's Rainbow in 1974.
A remarkable book
*Sunday Telegraph*
To read V. today is to experience Pynchon anew. Blast through the
multilayered densities of Gravity's Rainbow, Mason & Dixon, and
Against the Day, and you have a young Cornell graduate, an engineer
from Long Island, writing with an earnestness you might not have
expected, about a world he could never recover
*New Yorker*
[Pynchon's] ambitions in V. are prodigious, enough to demand
comparison less with Perelman than with the Joyce of the Circe
episode of Ulysses
*New York Review of Books 1963*
The greatest, wildest, most infuriating author of his
generation
*Guardian*
[Pynchon] writes richer comedy than most card-carrying comic
novelists, filling his eight novels with hilarious spoofs,
outlandish characters, screwball dialogue and zany scenarios
*Guardian*
Screwballs chase alligators in sewers in a chaotic and worlwide
chase for V., while literary styles, brilliant and bizarre, chase
each other
*Books and Bookmen*
The book sails with majesty through caverns measureless to man. Few
books haunt the waking or sleeping mind, but this is one
*Time*
Mr Pynchon writes with enormous skill and virtuosity
*Times Literary Supplement.*
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