Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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48 of 56 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A postmodern kick in the pants, July 10, 1996
By A Customer
Thirty years before "The Usual Suspects" prompted us to ask "Who is Keyser Soze?" Thomas Pynchon proposed an even more intriguing question: "Who is V.?" Yeah, that's right--"V.", the book you hated in college. The book your English professor was writing a book about (this was the same prof who'd already written "A Freudian Analysis of Gilligan's Island" and "Finnegan's Wake: I Understood the Whole Thing"). But hey, that guy could make an episode of "The X-Files" sound boring. Isn't it time you started reclaiming--and rereading--all of those books snooty academics ruined for you back in college? And why not start with a fat, sprawling book that's really a whole bookshelf of novels rolled into one? It's a mystery, a slapstick screwball comedy, a cat-and-mouse chase yarn spanning decades and continents, and a horrifying meditation on war. Oh, and did I mention the transparent robot who speaks telepathically--sort of? Or the alligators in the sewers? Read a classic of contemporary fiction that bucks like a mechanical bull--a book written by a guy who was recently spotted wearing a Godzilla t-shirt (true, by the way). It's so mysterious, you'll be mulling it over for months--interpretations are endless. And you don't have to write a paper about it when you're finished
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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
History, Technology and Alligators--V. is one great book!, May 1, 1997
By A Customer
Thomas Pynchon's first book V. is one of the great
books of the last 50 years. It is a book that is
filled with symbol and meaning and portent. At the
simplest level it is a story about Benny Profane,
a poor "schlemil" whose pathetic life is filled
with almost surreal adventures that lead him to
gangs and love and alligators in the sewers! But
Benny's adventures become inexplicablyintertwined
with those of Stencil and the mysterious V. And
therein lies the great challenge and great pleasure
of Pynchon. There is a search to discover meaning
and perhaps to discover one's own history. Pynchon's
tale leads back to the diplomatic intrique
preceding World War I and somehow connects us with
the misadventures of Benny. And all the while, like
some great mystery thriller in reverse, the deeper
one gets into V., the more information that is
revealed, the more complex the mystery becomes.
Indeed, the thrill of Pynchon is to become ensnared
in that mystery and try to find meaning in that
complex and interconnected web. Ultimately, perhaps,
like all the great questions in life, the question
of the meaning of who V. is and the meaning of the
book itself may never be answer. But the power of
this novel is that it draws you in to consider that
mystery. The book, somehow, finds connections
between the great historical events of the beginning
of this century and several generations of
characters who themselves are all interconnected
and the ever-changing technology of this century.
Is V. a mysterious woman, a cause of the wars of
this century or the essential meaninglessness
of modern society? Read V. and discover that answer
for yourself!
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17 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Very, very funny novel, September 17, 2005
Must break into the SERIOUS debate about this books merit by interjecting that this is, first and foremost, a very funny book. Just hilarious, on whatever level you prefer to read it at. Benny Profane indeed! I was an economics major, not a lit major, that probably helps me enjoy it, as I can readily choose to skip the "layers of meaning" that apparently must be front and forward to the literary types here. Perhaps that is why I enjoyed it so much.
Okay, not for Stephen King fans, certainly not for Danielle Steele fans, you do need the basic triple digit IQ to get past page 30. But you do not have to search for themes and meaning to enjoy this fine read, I swear. Not as accessible as Vineland, perhaps, but a lot easier reading than Gravities Rainbow, or the spotty and difficult Mason &Dixon. In V, the young Pynchon shows his early genius and wit.
Confession: I have not actually read this book in about 8 years, that was my third reading, but I suspect that if it wasn't dated in 1997, after being written in 1960, it isn't dated now.
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