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- <text id=90TT0145>
- <title>
- Jan. 15, 1990: The Spores Of Paranoia
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Jan. 15, 1990 Antarctica
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BOOKS, Page 69
- The Spores of Paranoia
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Paul Gray
- </p>
- <qt> <l>VINELAND</l>
- <l>by Thomas Pynchon</l>
- <l>Little, Brown; 385 pages; $19.95</l>
- </qt>
- <p> It is one of the better-known opening lines in American
- literature: "A screaming comes across the sky." Thus begins
- Gravity's Rainbow (1973), the mammoth and, to many,
- impenetrable novel that established Thomas Pynchon as the most
- important and mysterious writer of his generation. While his
- cult exfoliated, the author mostly remained silent; Slow
- Learner, a collection of five previously published stories,
- appeared in 1984. Now, at last, comes Vineland, Pynchon's first
- novel in nearly 17 years, and the faithful can again begin the
- quest for runic meanings, preferably hidden. And right up at
- the top of the second page of text, something interesting
- glimmers: "Desmond was out on the porch, hanging around his
- dish, which was always empty because of the blue jays who came
- screaming down out of the redwoods and carried off the food in
- it piece by piece."
- </p>
- <p> From the sound of a V-2 rocket descending on London in the
- earlier novel to the cries of birds pilfering dog food in
- Vineland: um, as a Pynchon character might say, there seems to
- have been a little downscaling going on around here. The
- perception is accurate but also, as things develop, a trifle
- misleading. True, this time out Pynchon has not tried to top
- the apocalypse of Gravity's Rainbow. He has chosen a subject
- that may even cause some groaning (Oh, come on, man, grow up)
- among reviewers and fans: the attempts of some aging hippies
- to steer clear of the narcs.
- </p>
- <p> Patience at this point is advisable, because it will be
- rewarded. The year is 1984, although flashbacks soon come thick
- and fast. The setting is Vineland County, a fictional,
- fog-shrouded expanse of Northern California where, as one
- character remarks, "half the interior hasn't even been
- surveyed."
- </p>
- <p> The spot is a perfect refuge for a remnant of wilting flower
- children, including Zoyd Wheeler, a part-time keyboard player,
- handyman and marijuana farmer. Along with his teenage daughter
- Prairie, Zoyd still mourns the departure and later
- disappearance of his ex-wife Frenesi, a onetime '60s radical
- who was seduced into becoming a Government informer by a
- notoriously malevolent federal prosecutor named Brock Vond. He
- has apparently not finished hounding the Wheelers and others.
- As one observer notes, "Nobody knows just what's goin' on,
- except there's a nut case leading a heavily armed strike force
- loose in California."
- </p>
- <p> These details establish the absolutely typical Pynchon plot.
- An evil, well-organized and immensely powerful enemy sows "the
- merciless spores of paranoia" among a shaggy, lost group of
- drifting souls who find the real world threatening under the
- best of circumstances. The intended victims, not all of whom
- think too clearly anymore, have other problems as well,
- including the task of making sense out of what is happening to
- them while knowing that sense, strictly defined, is a weapon of
- the other side. Caught between these opposing, mismatched
- factions is a child, Prairie, who would dearly love to find,
- and love, her mother.
- </p>
- <p> But the novel is only marginally about dopers and spoilsport
- law-enforcement types. The showdown looming in Vineland County
- serves as the melody for a series of dazzling riffs on the
- 1970s and early '80s. It comes as a surprise to realize that
- these generations are the lost ones in Pynchon's fiction. V.
- (1963) and The Crying of Lot 49 (1966) anticipated but arrived
- just before the triumphant effulgence of television and youth
- culture in American life; Gravity's Rainbow was chiefly set
- during World War II. So Vineland amounts to Pynchon's first
- words on the way we have been living during the past two
- decades.
- </p>
- <p> Wretchedly funny excess seems the point of the exercise, not
- to mention the hallmark of the years portrayed. Pynchon's
- technique is to turn up the volume on contemporary reality,
- fiddle with the contrast and horizontal hold, in order to
- produce scenes that are both distorted and recognizable, and
- a pretty good indication of where all the current trends may
- be heading.
- </p>
- <p> The people in Vineland have been steeped in TV long enough
- to become pickled. Some of them are Tubefreeks, whose habits
- of Tubal abuse alert the vigilant authorities at NEVER
- (National Endowment for Video Education and Rehabilitation).
- No one, however ascetic, seems immune to this electronic
- rescrambling of brain cells. A member of the Thanatoids, a
- Northern California cult enamored of death and resentful at
- still being alive, notes that his people look at TV
- religiously: "There'll never be a Thanatoid sitcom, 'cause all
- they could show'd be scenes of Thanatoids watchin' the Tube!"
- </p>
- <p> The tide of pop culture even swamps the high mountain ridge
- where sits the Retreat of the Kunoichi Attentives, a commune
- of women militantly opposed to male militarism. The library
- there contains hundreds of audiotapes, including The Chipmunks
- Sing Marvin Hamlisch. When a disciple commits a grievous
- offense against the rules of the order, she faces fearsome
- punishment, including "the Ordeal of the Thousand Broadway Show
- Tunes." As a rule, though, piped-in images are perceived as
- comforting. During her irregular childhood with Zoyd, Prairie
- sometimes wishes that she could be a member of "some family
- in a car, with no problems that couldn't be solved in half an
- hour of wisecracks and commercials." Near the end of the novel,
- when Prairie gets to meet her mother, nothing will do but that
- the child sing the theme song from Gilligan's Island.
- </p>
- <p> Pynchon's devotion to electronic allusions has been
- criticized before, and Vineland will no doubt increase the
- number of protests. It is, admittedly, disquieting to find a
- major author drawing cultural sustenance from The Brady Bunch
- and I Love Lucy instead of The Odyssey and the Bible. But to
- condemn Pynchon for this strategy is to confuse the author with
- his characters. He is a gifted man with anti-elitist
- sympathies. Like some fairly big names in innovative fiction,
- including Flaubert, Joyce and Faulkner, Pynchon writes about
- people who would not be able to read the books in which they
- appear. As a contemporary bonus, Pynchon's folks would not even
- be interested in trying. That is part of the sadness and the
- hilarity of this exhilarating novel.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-