Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Two facing rows of storefronts receded steeply down the packed-earth street. Where the buildings ended, nothing could be seen above the surface of the street, no horizon, no countryside, no winter sky, only an intense radiance filling the gap, a halo or glory out of which anything might emerge, into which anything might be taken, a portal of silver transfiguration, as if being displayed from the viewpoint of (let us imagine) a fallen gunfighter.

- from Against the Day by Thomas Pynchon


Hell if I know how to discuss or react to this book, 1005 pages into it. Summaries and discussions are by nature reductive, and this is a book that completely resists reduction. This much is true, though: every now and then, however dazed and on-autopilot I feel about the thing? There's some little tough little grassy patch of language that can't be stepped past lightly. Cuz, hot damn.

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Name: Darby M. Dixon III
Location: Lakewood, Ohio, United States

Darby M. Dixon III is the author of Thumb Drives and Oven Clocks, which, according to Wikipedia, is a popular litblog. He is afraid of nuts and is not fond of washing dishes. He would like it if you gave him a lot of money, but is shy, and therefore will not ask you for money.

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Thumb Drives and Oven Clocks.