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Gravity's Rainbow

Gravity's Rainbow is a 1973 novel by American writer Thomas Pynchon. The narrative is set primarily in Europe at the end of World War II and centers on the design, production and dispatch of V-2 rockets by the German military. In particular, it features the quest undertaken by several characters to uncover the secret of a mysterious device, the Schwarzgerät ("black device"), which is slated to be installed in a rocket with the serial number "00000".

Gravity's Rainbow
First edition cover design
AuthorThomas Pynchon
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreHistorical novel, satire, encyclopedic novel, science fiction, paranoid fiction
Published
Pages760
813.54

Traversing a wide range of knowledge, Gravity's Rainbow crosses boundaries between high and low culture, between literary propriety and profanity, and between science and speculative metaphysics. It shared the 1974 US National Book Award for Fiction with A Crown of Feathers and Other Stories by Isaac Bashevis Singer.[1] Although selected by the Pulitzer Prize jury on fiction for the 1974 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, the Pulitzer Advisory Board was offended by its content, some of which was described as "'unreadable,' 'turgid,' 'overwritten' and in parts 'obscene'".[2] No Pulitzer Prize was awarded for fiction that year.[2][3] The novel was nominated for the 1973 Nebula Award for Best Novel.[4]

Time named Gravity's Rainbow one of its "All-Time 100 Greatest Novels", a list of the best English-language novels from 1923 to 2005[5] and it is considered by many critics to be one of the greatest American novels ever written.[6]

Structure and chronology edit

[A] million bureaucrats are diligently plotting death and some of them even know it [...]

–Thomas Pynchon

Dedication edit

Gravity's Rainbow carries the dedication "For Richard Fariña". Pynchon had been a good friend of Fariña, a folk singer and novelist, since they had attended Cornell University together. Fariña had died in a motorcycle accident in 1966.

The title edit

Gravity's Rainbow is composed of four parts, each segmented into a number of episodes. In the original editions of the book, the episodes were separated by a row of seven small squares. Many readers, reviewers, and scholars, such as Richard Poirier, have suggested that the squares resemble the film perforations known as "sprocket holes" that engage with the teeth in a film camera or projector to advance the strip of film.[7] The squares, however, were inserted by Edwin Kennebeck, an editor at the book's original publisher, Viking Press.[8] Kennebeck denied that the layout was intentional, and later editions of the novel separate the segments with only one square.

Part 1: Beyond the Zero (21 episodes) edit

The name "Beyond the Zero" refers to lack of total extinction of a conditioned stimulus. The events of this part occur primarily during the Christmas Advent season of 1944 from December 18–26, coinciding in part with the Battle of the Bulge. The epigraph is a quotation from a pamphlet written by the rocket scientist Wernher von Braun and first published in 1962: "Nature does not know extinction; all it knows is transformation. Everything science has taught me, and continues to teach me, strengthens my belief in the continuity of our spiritual existence after death."[9] The epigraph reflects themes of anticipated redemption and blurring of the sacred and secular, both of which pervade Part 1.[10] The epigraph is also potentially ironic, given von Braun's central role in the development of Nazi Germany's V-2 rocket.

Part 2: Une Perm au Casino Hermann Goering (8 episodes) edit

"Une Perm au Casino Hermann Goering" is French for "A Furlough at the Hermann Göring Casino". The events of this section span the five months from Christmas 1944 through to Whitsunday the following year, May 20, 1945. The misrepresentation or reinterpretation of identity is reflected in Slothrop's journey as well as the epigraph, attributed to Merian C. Cooper, speaking to Fay Wray prior to her starring role in King Kong, as recounted by Wray in the September 21, 1969, issue of The New York Times: "You will have the tallest, darkest leading man in Hollywood."[11]

Part 3: In the Zone (32 episodes) edit

Part 3 is set during the summer of 1945 with analepses (literary flashbacks) to the time period of Part 2 with most events taking place between May 18 and August 6; the day of the atomic bomb attack on Hiroshima and also the Feast of the Transfiguration. The epigraph is taken from The Wizard of Oz, spoken by Dorothy as she arrives in Oz and shows her disorientation with the new environment: "Toto, I have a feeling we're not in Kansas any more...".

Part 4: The Counterforce (12 episodes) edit

Part 4 begins shortly after August 6, 1945, and covers the period up to September 14 of that same year; the day of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross, with extended analepses to Easter/April Fool's weekend of 1945 and culminating in a prolepsis to 1970. The simple epigraphical quotation, "What?" is attributed to Richard M. Nixon, and was added after the galleys of the novel had been printed to insinuate the President's involvement in the unfolding Watergate scandal.[12] The original quotation for this section (in the advance reading copies of the book) was an excerpt from the lyrics to the Joni Mitchell song "Cactus Tree" ("She has brought them to her senses/They have laughed inside her laughter/Now she rallies her defenses/For she fears that one will ask her/For eternity/And she’s so busy being free"), so the change in quotation jumped a large cultural divide.

Plot edit

 
Launch of a V-2 rocket

Part One: "Beyond the Zero": The opening pages of the novel follow Pirate Prentice, an employee of the Special Operations Executive (S.O.E.), first in his dreams, and later around the house in wartime London that he shares with several others in the S.O.E. He soon is driven to the site of a V-2 rocket strike. Pirate's associate Teddy Bloat photographs a map depicting the sexual encounters of U.S. Army Lt. Tyrone Slothrop, an employee of a fictional technical intelligence unit, ACHTUNG. Slothrop and his background are detailed through discussions by some of his co-workers and through references to his family's history, reaching back to early colonial times, in the Berkshire Mountains of western Massachusetts. (There are loose parallels to Pynchon's own family history.) Slothrop's (fictional) home town of Mingeborough is mentioned for the first time (although the town and a young boy named Hogan Slothrop had previously been featured in Pynchon's short story, "The Secret Integration"). That family setting will be mentioned several times much later in the novel, following the family's decline over time within a Puritan legacy of sterility and death.

Employees of a fictional top secret psychological warfare agency called PISCES, headquartered at a former insane asylum known as "The White Visitation", investigate Slothrop's map of his presumed sexual encounters in London, finding that each location appears to precede a V-2 rocket strike in the same place by several days. This coincidence intrigues Pavlovian behavioral psychologist Edward W. Pointsman, who thinks there may be a direct causal relationship between Slothrop's erections and the missile strikes, and his associate, statistician Roger Mexico, who suggests that the relationship is only a random coincidence of probabilities, as seen in Poisson distributions, leading to further reflections in this section and later on topics as broad as the occult, Determinism, the reverse flow of time, and the sexuality of the rocket itself. Pointsman is all the more intrigued to find that as a baby, Slothrop had been subjected to behavioral experiments conducted by a Dr. Laszlo Jamf that involved the stimulation of his penis to erections.

Many characters not significant until later are introduced in "Beyond the Zero", including one of Dr. Jamf's former students, Franz Pökler, a German engineer who has worked on early German experiments in rocketry and later on the V-2 rocket, and Pökler's wife Leni, a former student radical. Others who appear significant in Part One, such as Pointsman's associate Thomas Gwenhidwy and Roger Mexico's girlfriend Jessica Swanlake, vanish from the narrative and don't re-appear until much later. Indeed, most of the 400 named characters make only single appearances, serving merely to demonstrate the sheer scope of Pynchon's universe.[13] Character names sometimes consist of outrageous puns (such as "Joaquin Stick") but may also relate to particular traits of that character or to themes within the novel. Some names of historical characters also have thematic relevance. Under the influence of sodium amytal administered through Pointsman's maneuvers, Slothrop has a hallucinatory flashback to a scene in Boston's Roxbury district. References here include "Red, the Negro shoeshine boy," who will much later be known as the Black Power leader Malcolm X, and jazz saxophonist Charlie "Yardbird" Parker, both of whom represent a threat to white racism. Another fictional character, Katje Borgesius, is contacted in this section by Pirate in order to bring her to safety from the Continent to England. Katje had been a Dutch double agent who infiltrated a V-2 rocket-launching battery commanded by a sadistic SS officer named Captain Blicero. Blicero had kept Katje and a young soldier named Gottfried as sex slaves in a perverse enactment of the Hansel and Gretel story. However, Blicero (a Teutonic name connoting Death) is also revealed to be the code name of a former Lieutenant Weissman ("White Man") who earlier appeared in Pynchon's first novel, V. He has had an ongoing but now-severed relationship with Enzian, a Herero he had brought to Germany from German South West Africa (now Namibia), and who is the leader of a group of Herero rocket technicians known as the Schwarzkommando, who had been helping Blicero in his own project to create and fire a rocket. Katje, on the other hand, will come under Pointsman's control in England, while, as the Christmas season ends, Roger Mexico worries about losing Jessica Swanlake to her other, bureaucratic and sedate, boyfriend, Jeremy (also referred to as "Beaver" because of his beard).

Part Two: "Une Perm au Casino Hermann Goering": Slothrop is sent away by his superiors under mysterious circumstances to a casino on the recently liberated French Riviera, in which almost the entirety of Part Two takes place. He is in fact being monitored by associates of Pointsman, including Katje and a linguist named Sir Stephen Dodson-Truck. One of the more bizarre Pavlovian episodes involves the conditioning of octopus Grigori to attack Katje. Early in part two, the octopus attacks Katje on the beach in France, and Slothrop is "conveniently" at hand to rescue her. Katje and Slothrop eventually have sex. At the Casino, he learns of a rocket with the irregular serial number 00000 (Slothrop comments that the numbering system doesn't allow for four zeroes in one serial, let alone five), which features a mysterious component called the S-Gerät (short for Schwarzgerät, 'black device'), made out of the hitherto unknown plastic Imipolex G. It is hinted that Slothrop's prescience of rocket hits is due to being conditioned as an infant by the creator of Imipolex G, Laszlo Jamf. Later, the reality of this story is called into question, as is the very existence of Slothrop's original sexual exploits.

Meanwhile, at The White Visitation, Pointsman brings the unit and its mission under his control. The unit's nominal commander, Brigadier General Ernest Pudding, who is haunted by his traumatic memories of World War I, is brought to (literal) submission through sado-masochistic rituals with Katje, engineered by Pointsman.

Slothrop becomes increasingly paranoid, as old associates disappear. He begins to suspect he is being monitored and adopts the persona (one of many) of "Ian Scuffling," a British war correspondent. He escapes from the casino into "The Zone", the coalescing post-war wasteland of Europe, first to Nice in France and then to Switzerland, searching for the 00000 and S-Gerät. In the closing of Part Two, Katje is revealed to be safe in England, enjoying a day at the beach with Roger Mexico and Jessica, as well as Pointsman, who is in charge of Slothrop's furtive supervision. While unable to contact Slothrop (or prohibited from contacting him), Katje continues to follow his actions through Pointsman, who is showing greater signs of mental instability.

Part Three, "In The Zone": Slothrop's quest continues for some time as he meets or is chased by other characters, compared at various times to such characters as Orpheus and Wagner's Tannhauser. He learns more about his own past, Dr. Jamf's experiments on him, and his father's apparent complicity. In this section, Slothrop comes to doubt that his search for the S-Gerat is a Grail quest and finds his paranoia ("the fear that everything is connected") succumbing to "anti-paranoia" ("the fear that nothing is connected"). On the way he meets Geli Tripping, a self-described witch in love with a Russian colonel, Vaslav Tchitcherine, who had previously worked for the Soviet state bringing the New Turkic Alphabet to central Asia, especially Soviet Kazakhstan, where he had sought a mystical experience referred to as the "Kazakh Light". Slothrop and Geli have a near-mystical experience at the summit of the Brocken, the German mountain that was the setting for Walpurgisnacht in Goethe's Faust. Slothrop's travels bring him to Nordhausen, in Germany, and the Mittelwerk, where V-2 rockets were assembled using slave labor from the Dora concentration camp. Confronted by the racist American Major Duane Marvy, he escapes in a slapstick chase.

Slothrop meets members of the Schwarzkommando, a fictional cadre of African rocket technicians, descended from survivors of the Herero genocide of 1904 who were brought to Europe by German colonials. An extensive subplot details a schism within the Schwarzkommando; one faction is bent on a program of racial suicide, while the other finds mystical, semi-religious meaning in the V-2 rocket. Another long subplot details Tchitcherine's past and his quest to hunt and kill Enzian, leader of the latter group of Schwarzkommando and, it turns out, Tchitcherine's half-brother.

With papers identifying him as former German film star Max Schlepzig in Berlin, Slothrop adopts an operatic Viking costume with the horns removed from the helmet, making it look like a rocket nose-cone and is given the name "Rocketman". One of the people he meets is the American sailor Pig Bodine (who or whose ancestors appear in most of Pynchon's other works). Bodine commissions Slothrop to retrieve a large stash of hashish from the centre of the Potsdam Conference. In the nearby abandoned movie studio that was once the center of the German film industry, Slothrop meets Margherita (Greta) Erdmann, a former silent film actress from the era of German Expressionist film, now in physical and mental decline. Slothrop also comes to meet Gerhardt von Göll, a megalomaniac German director who had previously been seen in Britain, directing a fake propaganda film featuring Black soldiers in Germany. Von Göll is now involved in black market activities. In the longest episode of the book, we learn more of the history of Franz Pökler, who fathered a child, Ilse, with his wife Leni after being aroused by Greta's image in an erotic scene in Alpdrücken, von Göll's "masterpiece". Greta had also become pregnant in the filming of that scene, producing a daughter of her own, Bianca. While working on the V-2 project, Pökler had been coerced into working on the S-Gerät by Blicero, who was holding Ilse in a concentration camp, allowing her to visit Pökler only once a year. As Ilse ages over several years, however, Pökler becomes increasingly paranoid that she is really a series of impostors sent each year to mollify him. Pökler's work for Blicero is tied to the history of organic chemistry, with its own outcomes in the production of dyes and plastics and the international cartels that would come to control them, such as I.G. Farben, and a culture of death-in-life.

Slothrop is led by Margherita to northern Germany and onto the Anubis, a private yacht (named for the Egyptian god of the dead) filled with uninhibited European aristocrats. Here, Slothrop has sex with Margherita's teenage daughter, Bianca. Margherita, along with her partner, Thanatz, are revealed to know more about the 00000, S-Gerät, and Imipolex G than they let on. Ensign Morituri, a Japanese liaison officer, tells Slothrop about how Margherita and Thanatz had brought their traveling sado-masochistic act to Captain Blicero's rocket battery, from which Rocket 00000 had apparently been fired in the spring of 1945, towards the end of the war. Margherita spent many days in a mysterious and ambiguously described factory, where she was clothed in an outfit made from the "erotic" plastic Imipolex G. Slothrop falls overboard and is rescued by black marketeers heading towards Peenemünde, the test site for the V-2 rocket, now occupied by Soviet forces.

Slothrop later returns to the Anubis to find Bianca dead, possibly hastening his already hinted-at decline. He continues his pilgrimage through northern Germany, having changed clothing with Tchitcherine, arriving at Lüneberg Heath and the town of Cuxhaven, also sites of tests and launches by Allied forces of captured V-2 rockets. On the way, he again meets Major Marvy, who fails to recognize him. At a village festival, he is invited by children to don the costume of a pre-Christian Pig Hero, "Plechazunga." Meeting Pökler at the abandoned amusement park where Ilse used to meet her father, Slothrop finds out more about his childhood and the 00000. It becomes steadily apparent that Slothrop is connected to Laszlo Jamf through Lyle Bland, a Slothrop family friend who apparently played a role in funding Jamf's experiments on the infant Slothrop. Bland, in turn, is connected to many threads, including pinball machines and the Masons, that implicate him as part of an international conspiracy of industrial cartels.

Slothrop is introduced to and sleeps with Solange, a prostitute who is actually Leni Pökler, recently freed from a concentration camp herself. In the same building, Major Marvy has found Slothrop's pig costume and dons it, only to be caught, sedated, and castrated by agents working for Pointsman, who believe that Slothrop is still in the suit. Major political and social realignments have been taking place throughout The Zone. Towards the end of this section, several characters not seen since early in the novel make a return, including Pointsman, who is now in official disgrace, as bureaucratic operatives consider how to deal with him. Other characters, including Pirate Prentice and Katje Borgesius, begin to coalesce as a group styling itself as the "Counterforce" in resistance to the emerging post-war industrial-military complex.

Part Four: The Counterforce: Elements in this section become increasingly fantastic and sometimes self-referential, the narrator at one point saying, "You will want cause and effect. All right" (page 663 in the Viking edition) before explaining how certain events in Part 3 tie in. Despite the efforts of some to save him, Slothrop is repeatedly sidetracked until his persona fragments totally, more than one hundred pages before the novel's end. A flashback reveals how Roger Mexico, now in Germany, has come to join the Counterforce despite its inherent contradictions as a group organizing against international organizations. A long digression gives the story of "Byron the Bulb," a sentient, seemingly immortal lightbulb whose existence links with Dr. Jamf and his experiments and to the integration of power companies and their Grid to the network of cartels. The Schwarzkommando become reunited and finish construction of their own version of the 00000 rocket.

There are several brief, hallucinatory stories of comic, fallible superheroes; silly Kamikaze pilots; and an "Incident in the Transvestites' Toilet" where Slothrop has been hiding in drag. Such incidents may be products of Slothrop's finally collapsed mind; or of the increasingly chaotic state of affairs outside the realm of a rising technological class and society that comes to be labeled the "Raketen-Stadt" (Rocket-State) of the future. For Slothrop, these scenes more or less culminate with his finding, and failing to understand, a headline announcing the atomic bombing of Hiroshima.

Tchitcherine is told by his superior officer that he is to head back to the U.S.S.R. with some German rocket scientists, despite his own misgivings about Marxist dialectics. A conference is held by members of the Counterforce, which now includes some with questionable pasts, personalities, or motives, such as von Göll. Jessica tells Roger that she is going to marry Jeremy/Beaver. Invited to a dinner at the home of a German industrialist, Roger and Pig Bodine manage to escape with the help of some disgusting culinary repartee, but it becomes increasingly clear that the Counterforce does not have the capacity to counter the emerging Rocket State, in part because "the Man has a branch office in each of our brains."

Some individuals, however, provide some hope. Earlier, Slothrop had encountered a young boy on what seems to be a futile quest to find his lost pet lemming. Meeting once again, it turns out that the lemming has been found. Geli Tripping's complete love for Tchitcherine and her connection with the natural organic world contrasts with a flashback in which Blicero explains to Gottfried his obsessive desire to transcend nature and "its cycle of infection and death." Geli does cast a spell on Tchitcherine that (perhaps) keeps him from recognizing Enzian when they finally meet, averting a potentially fatal encounter.

The final identification of Slothrop of any certainty is his picture on the cover of an album by obscure English band "The Fool" (another allusion to Tarot, which becomes increasingly significant), where he is credited as playing the harmonica and kazoo. The hundred pages or so of the novel include titled vignettes that summarize events in Slothrop's home town of Mingeborough; offer a (self-referential) reading of the Tarot cards for Weismann/Blicero, who also prepares for a final launch of the 00000 rocket with Gottfried in the nosecone; describe failed last-minute non-rescues by popular culture heroes; and allude to the Sacrifice of Isaac and the mythical figures of Apollo and Orpheus.

As the novel draws to an ambiguous close, the launch of the rocket with Gottfried is intercut with scenes contemporary to the novel's publication, at the (fictional) Orpheus (movie) Theater in Los Angeles, managed by a character named "Richard M. Zhlubb," a thinly-veiled parody of President Richard Nixon. Zhlubb is running a "Bengt Ekerot / Maria Casares Film Festival." Both actors played personifications of Death, in Ingmar Bergman's The Seventh Seal and Jean Cocteau's Orpheus, respectively, overt examples of several possible references in the novel to European modernist cinema. The novel concludes as a rocket (perhaps Weissman's) is frozen in its last moment of descent above the theater, where the film being projected has broken, and a hymn composed by Slothrop's heretical colonial ancestor, William Slothrop, is offered.

 
This image of Wernher von Braun is referred to in the narrative, giving a quite exact timeframe for some events in the book.

Style edit

Poet L. E. Sissman, in his Gravity's Rainbow review for The New Yorker, said of Pynchon: "He is almost a mathematician of prose, who calculates the least and the greatest stress each word and line, each pun and ambiguity, can bear, and applies his knowledge accordingly and virtually without lapses, though he takes many scary, bracing linguistic risks. Thus his remarkably supple diction can first treat a painful and delicate love scene and then roar, without pause, into the sounds and echoes of a drudged and drunken orgy."[14]

The plot of the novel is complex, containing over 400 characters and involving many different threads of narrative which intersect and weave around one another.[15] The recurring themes throughout the plot are the V-2 rocket, interplay between free will and Calvinistic predestination, breaking the cycle of nature, behavioral psychology, sexuality, paranoia and conspiracy theories such as the Phoebus cartel and the Illuminati. Gravity's Rainbow also draws heavily on themes that Pynchon had probably encountered at his work as a technical writer for Boeing, where he edited a support newsletter for the Bomarc Missile Program support unit. The Boeing archives are known to house a vast library of historical V-2 rocket documents, which were probably accessible to Pynchon. The novel is narrated by many distinct voices, a technique further developed in Pynchon's much later novel Against the Day. The style and tone of the voices vary widely: Some narrate the plot in a highly informal tone, some are more self-referential, and some might even break the fourth wall. Some voices narrate in drastically different formats, ranging from movie-script format to stream of consciousness prose.

The narrative contains numerous descriptions of illicit sexual encounters and drug use by the main characters and supporting cast, sandwiched between dense dialogues or reveries on historic, artistic, scientific, or philosophical subjects, interspersed with whimsical nonsense-poems and allusions to obscure facets of 1940s pop culture. Many of the recurring themes will be familiar to experienced Pynchon readers, including the singing of silly songs, recurring appearances of kazoos, and extensive discussion of paranoia. According to Richard Locke, megalomaniac paranoia is the "operative emotion" behind the novel,[16] and an increasingly central motivator for the many main characters. In many cases, this paranoia proves to be vindicated, as the many plots of the novel become increasingly interconnected, revolving around the identity and purpose of the elusive 00000 Rocket and Schwarzgerät. The novel becomes increasingly preoccupied with themes of Tarot, Paranoia, and Sacrifice. All three themes culminate in the novel's ending, and the epilogue of the many characters. The novel also features the character Pig Bodine, of Pynchon's novel V. Bodine would later become a recurring avatar of Pynchon's complex and interconnected fictional universe, making an appearance in nearly all of Pynchon's novels thereafter.

Several characters and situations from Pynchon's earlier works make at least brief appearances in the novel. Slothrop's (fictional) home town of Mingeborough, Massachusetts was the setting for his short story "The Secret Integration," which featured a young character named Hogan Slothrop, who in retrospect would seem to be Tyrone's nephew. Weismann (aka Blicero) and the story of the Herero genocide appeared in the chapter "Mondaugen's Story" in V. The eponymous character Kurt Mondaugen also reappears in Gravity's Rainbow. Some early reviewers even suggested that Gravity's Rainbow was a sequel to Pynchon's first novel, playing on the term "V-2".[17] In Gravity's Rainbow, Clayton "Bloody" Chiclitz is a toy manufacturer accompanying Major Marvy, but he appeared later as a defense contract magnate in The Crying of Lot 49, and his company. Yoyodyne, was introduced in V. Pig Bodine also appeared in V. but had his origin in Pynchon's early short story "Low-Lands." Bodine or variants on his name and character also appear in later Pynchon novels. A very minor character in Gravity's Rainbow, Ronald Cherrycoke, would seem to be a descendant of the Reverend Wicks Cherrycoke, who narrates Pynchon's later novel Mason & Dixon.

Critical reception edit

On the novel's publication in 1973, it was reviewed in the New York Times by Richard Locke under the headline "One of the Longest, Most Difficult, Most Ambitious Novels in Years". Locke compared Pynchon's writing to that of Vladimir Nabokov's, and that "its technical and verbal resources bring to mind Melville and Faulkner. Immersing himself in 'the destructive element' and exploring paranoia, entropy and the love of death as primary forces in the history of our time, Pynchon establishes his imaginative continuity with the great modernist writers of the early years of this century." Locke noted that "Pynchon is obviously capable of the most intricate literary structures--plots and counterplots and symbols that twist and tangle in time and space", but was less impressed by the novel's form: "the structure is strained beyond the breaking point. Reading it is often profoundly exasperating; the book is too long and dense; despite the cornucopia of brilliant details and grand themes, one's dominant feelings in the last one to two hundred pages are a mounting restlessness, fatigue and frustration."[18]

Reviewing the novel in the Saturday Review in March 1973, Richard Poirier stated that "At thirty-six, Pynchon has established himself as a novelist of major importance." In the highly positive review, Poirier compared Gravity's Rainbow to Moby Dick and Ulysses, and that it "marks an advance beyond either book in its treatment of cultural inheritance". Poirier noted the wide range of Pynchon's writing and said that "Pynchon is willing and able, that is, to work from a range of perspectives infinitely wider, more difficult to manage, more learned than any to be found elsewhere in contemporary literature. His genius resides in his capacity to see, to see feelingly, how these various perspectives, apparently so diverse and chaotic, are begotten of the same technology, the same supportive structures that have foundations in the theology of the seventeenth century and the science of the nineteenth." (...) "Pynchon is almost unbearably vulnerable to every aspect of contemporary experience, open to every form of sight and sound, democratically receptive to the most common and the most recondite signatures of things."[19]

On the 50th anniversary of the publication in February 2023, John Semley positively reviewed Gravity's Rainbow in Wired, noting that: "It is at once a busy almanac of its era and a sort of field guide for our own. It echoes eerily in the new-ish millennium. In a way, our own age's greasy stew of absurdity and apocalypticism, creeping death tinged with clown-shoe idiocy, suggests a world that has finally, fatefully, caught up with Pynchon. We are still living under Gravity’s Rainbow."[20]

The character name "Tyrone Slothrop" has been read as an anagram of "Sloth or Entropy" by writer Salman Rushdie.[21]

Cultural influence edit

 
Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition, with cover art by Frank Miller, released October 31, 2006

Italian scholar Guido Almansi [it] described it as the greatest American novel published after the end of the Second World War.[6] Sascha Pöhlmann writing for The Literary Encyclopedia stated that it is "often considered as the postmodern novel, redefining both postmodernism and the novel in general".[22] Literary scholar Tony Tanner has hailed it as "both one of the great historical novels of our time and arguably the most important literary text since Ulysses."[23]

Though the book won the National Book Award for 1974,[1] Pynchon chose neither to accept nor acknowledge this award. Thomas Guinzberg of the Viking Press suggested that the comedian "Professor" Irwin Corey accept the award on his behalf, to which Pynchon agreed.[24] Corey's comical address at the ceremony was also noteworthy for being interrupted by a streaker crossing the stage.[25][26]

Gravity's Rainbow has been translated to many languages, including French (as Rainbow, 1975), Spanish (as El arco iris de la gravedad, 1978), German (as Die Enden der Parabel, 1981) and Serbian (as Duga gravitacije, 2019). Episodes of the novel have been translated to Japanese.[23]

Gravity's Rainbow was translated into German by Nobel laureate Elfriede Jelinek, and some critics think that it has had a large influence on Jelinek's own writing.[27]

Adaptations edit

According to Robert Bramkamp's docudrama about the V2 and Gravity's Rainbow, entitled Prüfstand VII, the BBC initiated a project to produce a film adaptation of Gravity's Rainbow between 1994 and 1997. Some unfinished footage is included in Bramkamp's film.[28] The Bramkamp movie includes other dramatized sequences from the novel as well, while the main focus is on Peenemünde and the V2. The 2011 film Impolex by Alex Ross Perry is loosely inspired by Gravity's Rainbow, the title referring to the fictional polymer Imipolex G used to condition Slothrop in the novel. To commemorate 75 years since the end of World War II, in 2019, German public radio broadcasters SWR 2 and Deutschlandfunk produced a 14-hour radio play in German language which was aired in April 2020.

Music edit

The lyrics of Devo's song "Whip It" were inspired by Gravity's Rainbow parodies of limericks and poems; Gerald Casale specified:

The lyrics were written by me as an imitation of Thomas Pynchon's parodies in his book Gravity's Rainbow. He had parodied limericks and poems of kind of all-American, obsessive, cult of personality ideas like Horatio Alger and "You're #1, there's nobody else like you" kind of poems that were very funny and very clever. I thought, "I'd like to do one like Thomas Pynchon," so I wrote down "Whip It" one night.[29]

The novel inspired the 1984 song "Gravity's Angel" by Laurie Anderson. In her 2004 autobiographical performance The End of the Moon, Anderson said she once contacted Pynchon asking permission to adapt Gravity's Rainbow as an opera. Pynchon replied that he would allow her to do so only if the opera was written for a single instrument: the banjo. Anderson said she took that as a polite "no."[30]

German avant-rock group Cassiber incorporated text from the novel in their 1990 album A Face We All Know. The use of the text was cleared with Pynchon's agent.[31]

Pat Benatar released a 1993 album called Gravity's Rainbow after reading Thomas Pynchon's novel.[citation needed] "Gravity's Rainbow" is a song by the British band Klaxons, from the album Myths of the Near Future (2007).

American progressive rock group Coheed and Cambria's song "Gravity's Union", from their science fiction concept album The Afterman: Descension (2013), is named in honor of the novel.

Canadian experimental rock group Rei dos Leitoes's song "Silent on the Island" (2010) incorporates themes from Gravity's Rainbow in its second and fourth Verse passages.

David Lowery of the American alternative rock group Camper Van Beethoven cites Gravity's Rainbow as an inspiration for the song "All Her Favorite Fruit" (1989).[32]

The group TV Girl's song "Taking What's Not Yours", from Who Really Cares references having left Gravity's Rainbow at an ex-girlfriend's apartment.[33]

British punk/new wave band The Paranoids released 'Theme From Gravity's Rainbow' as the 'B' side to 'The Love Job' (Hurricane Records (2) – FIRE 14 1980) with a lyric inspired by the novel. Produced by Roy Wood.[34]

American Rock Band The Used released a song sharing the same title as part of their 2020 Album Heartwork. Bert McCracken, the band's lead singer, said that Gravity's Rainbow is one of his favorite books of all time.[35]

Art edit

New York artist Zak Smith created a series of 760 drawings entitled, One Picture for Every Page of Thomas Pynchon's Novel "Gravity's Rainbow", also known by the title Pictures of What Happens on Each Page of Thomas Pynchon's Novel "Gravity's Rainbow".[36] Occupying eleven rows and over eleven meters of wall space, the drawings attempt to illustrate, as literally as possible, every page of the book. The piece includes palm trees, shoes, stuffed toys, a lemon meringue pie, Richard Nixon, Sigmund Freud, an iron toad wired to an electric battery, a dominatrix, and other images from the novel. The series had a successful reception at New York's 2004 Whitney Biennial event, and was described "as a tour de force of sketching and concept" (Abbe 2004). In November 2006, Tin House Books published, Pictures Showing What Happens on Each Page of Thomas Pynchon's Novel "Gravity's Rainbow", the book of Smith's Gravity's Rainbow drawings .[37]

In 1999 a painting by the American artist Fred Tomaselli, inspired by the novel and titled Gravity's Rainbow (Large), was added to the permanent collection at the Whitney Museum of Art in New York City.[38]

Film edit

  • Benoit Blanc, a character in the 2019 American film Knives Out, references Gravity's Rainbow before admitting that he had not read it and only name-dropped it to give himself gravitas.[39] In the standalone sequel, Glass Onion, the novel physically appears, being read by Serena Williams.[40]
  • An early scene in the 1988 American film Miracle Mile features a character played by Denise Crosby taking what appears to be a copy of a (fictional) study guide, Cliff's Notes: Gravity's Rainbow, out of a briefcase and studies it for a short time. The film deals with the reaction of characters to an impending nuclear missile attack.
  • The novel appears in the film Interstellar.[41]

Video games edit

Speaking about his video game The Witness, director Jonathan Blow said "I want to make games for people who like to read Gravity's Rainbow".[42] He later elaborated:[43]

Gravity's Rainbow is a very free book in a certain way. It doesn't care if you're following along exactly. It has a certain freedom and joy to it while also being pretty dark a lot of the time. I can't think of a game that has managed this emotional pan-spectrality of being very joyful and playful while simultaneously being bleak.

See also edit

Further reading edit

  • Mendelson, Edward (1976). "Gravity's Encyclopedia". In Levine, George; David Leverenz (eds.). Mindful Pleasures: Essays on Thomas Pynchon. Little, Brown. pp. 161–95.
    • Reprinted in Mendelson, Edward (1986). "Gravity's Encyclopedia". In Bloom, Harold (ed.). Thomas Pynchon's Gravity's Rainbow: Modern Critical Interpretations. New Haven: Chelsea House. pp. 29–52.

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b "National Book Awards 1974". National Book Foundation. (With essays by Casey Hicks and Chad Post from the Awards' 60-year anniversary blog. The acceptance speech by Irwin Corey is not reprinted by the National Book Foundation.). Retrieved 2012-03-29.
  2. ^ a b Kihss, Peter (May 8, 1974). "Pulitzer Jurors Dismayed on Pynchon". The New York Times. Retrieved April 20, 2017.
  3. ^ McDowell, Edwin (May 11, 1984). "Publishing: Pulitzer Controversies". The New York Times. p. C26.
  4. ^ "1973 Award Winners & Nominees". Worlds Without End. Retrieved 2009-07-06.
  5. ^ "ALL-Time 100 Novels". Time. October 16, 2005. Retrieved 2009-10-15.
  6. ^ a b Almansi, p. 226: "piu importante romanzo americano del secondo dopoguerra, Gravity's Rainbow di Thomas Pynchon (romanzo mai pubblicato in Italia, con grande vergogna dell'editoria nazionale)." English translation: "most important American novel of the second post-war, Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon (a novel never published in Italy, to the great shame of the national publishing industry)". Almansi's comment is from 1994. Gravity's Rainbow was translated and published in Italy in 1999.
  7. ^ "Review of Thomas Pynchon's Gravity's Rainbow – Richard Poirier 1973". thomaspynchon.com. Retrieved 2020-10-29.
  8. ^ Howard, Gerald (Summer 2005). "Pynchon from A to V: Gerald Howard on Gravity's Rainbow". Bookforum. Summer | 2005: 6–7.
  9. ^ Von Braun, Wernher, . Archived from the original on April 10, 2022., in William Nichols (ed.), The Third Book of Words to Live By, Simon and Schuster, 1962, pp. 119–120.
  10. ^ Weisenburger, Steven (1988). A Gravity's Rainbow Companion: Sources and Contexts for Pynchon's Novel. University of Georgia Press. ISBN 0-8203-1026-3. Retrieved July 12, 2018.
  11. ^ Weisenburger, "Part 2: Un Perm au Casino Hermann Goering", p. 105: "The epigraph derives from a New York Times feature of September 21, 1969, entitled 'How Fay Met Kong...'"
  12. ^ Pynchon Notes 11 2006-09-09 at the Wayback Machine, February 1983, p. 64.
  13. ^ Ware, Tim. "Gravity's Rainbow Characters - diagram" (PDF). ThomasPynchon.com.
  14. ^ Sissman, L. E. (1973) Hieronymus and Robert Bosch: The Art of Thomas Pynchon. The New Yorker 49, 19 May 1973, pp. 138–40.
  15. ^ Tanner, p. 74: "There are over 400 characters ... there are many discernible ... plots ... these plots touch and intersect, or diverge and separate."
  16. ^ Richard Locke, book review 2013-01-13 at the Wayback Machine for The New York Times Book Review, March 11, 1973
  17. ^ Mendelson, Edward (1978). Pynchon: A Collection of Critical Essays. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall. ISBN 9780137447060.
  18. ^ Locke, Richard (11 March 1973). "One of the Longest, Most Difficult, Most Ambitious Novels in Years". New York Times.
  19. ^ Poirier, Richard (3 March 1973). "Rocket Power – Gravity's Rainbow Reviewed by Richard Poirier – 1973". thomaspynchon.com.
  20. ^ Semley, John (18 February 2023). "We're All Living Under Gravity's Rainbow". Wired.
  21. ^ "The New York Times: Book Review Search Article". archive.nytimes.com. Retrieved 2023-08-30.
  22. ^ Pöhlmann, Sascha. "Gravity's Rainbow". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 24 October 2006, accessed 17 March 2013.
  23. ^ a b Steven C. Weisenburger A Gravity's Rainbow Companion: Sources and Contexts for Pynchon's Novel, Introduction, University of Georgia Press 2006
  24. ^ Corey, Irwin (1996). "Professor Irwin Corey Accepts the National Book Award for Thomas Pynchon". Pynchon Notes. doi:10.16995/pn.188.
  25. ^ Witt, Emily (2011-11-10). "Irwin Corey, Thomas Pynchon's Stand-in, Still Up to His Old Tricks". The Observer.
  26. ^ "Professor Irwin Corey's acceptance speech". Pynchon Wiki. Retrieved 17 February 2023.
  27. ^ Konzett, p. 16
  28. ^ "Prüfstand 7 - Download". www.pruefstand7.de. Retrieved 2023-01-13.
  29. ^ "Whip It". Songfacts.com. Retrieved 2017-04-07.
  30. ^ Papageorge, John. . Silicon Valley Radio. Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2014-07-02.
  31. ^ . The Modern Word. Archived from the original on 2012-11-02. Retrieved 2007-05-22.
  32. ^ "Interview: David Lowery of Cracker and Camper Van Beethoven". Popgurls.com. 4 June 2006. Retrieved 2011-06-21.
  33. ^ "Taking What's Not Yours". musixmatch.com.
  34. ^ "The Paranoids – the Love Job (1980, Vinyl)". Discogs. 1980.
  35. ^ Shepherd, Tom. "Bert McCracken: 'The Used Made It Awful for all the True Punk Bands, We Weren't Afraid of Radio or MTV'". Kerrang!.
  36. ^ Smith, Zak. . The Modern Word. Archived from the original on 3 June 2005.
  37. ^ Smith, Zak (2006). Pictures Showing What Happens on Each Page of Thomas Pynchon's Novel "Gravity's Rainbow", by Zak Smith. Tin House Books. ISBN 9780977312795. Retrieved 2019-04-08. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  38. ^ Harris, William (1999-12-19). "ART/ARCHITECTURE; He Dropped Out Of Drugs, and Put Them in His Art". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-01-13.
  39. ^ "'Knives Out' director Rian Johnson explains Daniel Craig's 'Gravity's Rainbow' joke". www.sfgate.com. 6 December 2019. Retrieved 2020-02-26.
  40. ^ "Glass Onion Continues One Of Knives Out's Strangest References". screenrant.com. 30 December 2022. Retrieved 2 January 2023.
  41. ^ Valcarel, Josh. "9 Easter Eggs From the Bookshelf in Interstellar". Wired.
  42. ^ Marsh, Calum (27 January 2016). "Jonathan Blow: 'I want to make games for people who read Gravity's Rainbow'". The Guardian. Retrieved 7 April 2020.
  43. ^ Juul, Jesper. "Interview with Jonathan Blow". Handmade Pixels. Retrieved 7 April 2020.

Sources edit

  • Almansi, Guido, L'estetica dell'osceno, Madrid: Akal, 1977, (in Spanish) ISBN 84-7339-286-8
  • Booker, M. Keith, Techniques of Subversion in Modern Literature: Transgression, Abjection, and the Carnivalesque, University Press of Florida, 1991, ISBN 0-8130-1065-9
  • Konzett, Matthias and Margarete Lamb-Faffelberger, Elfriede Jelinek: writing woman, nation, and identity: a critical anthology, Madison NJ, Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2007, ISBN 0-8386-4154-7
  • Levine, George Lewis, Mindful pleasures: essays on Thomas Pynchon, Boston: Little, Brown, 1976, ISBN 0-316-52230-9
  • Moore, Thomas, The style of connectedness: Gravity's rainbow and Thomas Pynchon, Columbia: University of Missouri Press, 1987, ISBN 0-8262-0625-5
  • Pöhlmann, Sascha, "Gravity's Rainbow". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 24 October 2006.accessed 17 March 2013.
  • Schwab, Gabriele, Subjects Without Selves: Transitional Texts in Modern Fiction, Harvard University Press,1994, ISBN 0-674-85381-4
  • Tanner, Tony, Thomas Pynchon, London and New York: Methuen, 1982, ISBN 0-416-31670-0
  • Weisenburger, Steven, A Gravity's Rainbow Companion, University of Georgia Press, 1988, ISBN 0-8203-1026-3

External links edit

  • A Gravity's Rainbow Companion by Steven Weisenburger
  • Gravity's Rainbow episodes at the Pynchon in Public Podcast
  • Gravity's Rainbow Cover Art Over Time @ ThomasPynchon.com
  • Gravity's Rainbow Wiki @ PynchonWiki.com
  • Gravity's Rainbow review by Ted Gioia (Conceptual Fiction) 2020-10-05 at the Wayback Machine
  • "How to Identify a Gravity’s Rainbow First Edition: Hardcover and Paperback"
  • A PDF map of how characters connect to each other in Gravity's Rainbow.

gravity, rainbow, other, uses, disambiguation, 1973, novel, american, writer, thomas, pynchon, narrative, primarily, europe, world, centers, design, production, dispatch, rockets, german, military, particular, features, quest, undertaken, several, characters, . For other uses see Gravity s Rainbow disambiguation Gravity s Rainbow is a 1973 novel by American writer Thomas Pynchon The narrative is set primarily in Europe at the end of World War II and centers on the design production and dispatch of V 2 rockets by the German military In particular it features the quest undertaken by several characters to uncover the secret of a mysterious device the Schwarzgerat black device which is slated to be installed in a rocket with the serial number 00000 Gravity s RainbowFirst edition cover designAuthorThomas PynchonCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishGenreHistorical novel satire encyclopedic novel science fiction paranoid fictionPublished1973 Viking Press 1974 Bantam Books 1987 Penguin Books Pages760Dewey Decimal813 54Traversing a wide range of knowledge Gravity s Rainbow crosses boundaries between high and low culture between literary propriety and profanity and between science and speculative metaphysics It shared the 1974 US National Book Award for Fiction with A Crown of Feathers and Other Stories by Isaac Bashevis Singer 1 Although selected by the Pulitzer Prize jury on fiction for the 1974 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction the Pulitzer Advisory Board was offended by its content some of which was described as unreadable turgid overwritten and in parts obscene 2 No Pulitzer Prize was awarded for fiction that year 2 3 The novel was nominated for the 1973 Nebula Award for Best Novel 4 Time named Gravity s Rainbow one of its All Time 100 Greatest Novels a list of the best English language novels from 1923 to 2005 5 and it is considered by many critics to be one of the greatest American novels ever written 6 Contents 1 Structure and chronology 1 1 Dedication 1 2 The title 1 3 Part 1 Beyond the Zero 21 episodes 1 4 Part 2 Une Perm au Casino Hermann Goering 8 episodes 1 5 Part 3 In the Zone 32 episodes 1 6 Part 4 The Counterforce 12 episodes 2 Plot 3 Style 4 Critical reception 5 Cultural influence 5 1 Adaptations 5 2 Music 5 3 Art 5 4 Film 5 5 Video games 6 See also 7 Further reading 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Sources 9 External linksStructure and chronology edit A million bureaucrats are diligently plotting death and some of them even know it Thomas Pynchon Dedication edit Gravity s Rainbow carries the dedication For Richard Farina Pynchon had been a good friend of Farina a folk singer and novelist since they had attended Cornell University together Farina had died in a motorcycle accident in 1966 The title edit Gravity s Rainbow is composed of four parts each segmented into a number of episodes In the original editions of the book the episodes were separated by a row of seven small squares Many readers reviewers and scholars such as Richard Poirier have suggested that the squares resemble the film perforations known as sprocket holes that engage with the teeth in a film camera or projector to advance the strip of film 7 The squares however were inserted by Edwin Kennebeck an editor at the book s original publisher Viking Press 8 Kennebeck denied that the layout was intentional and later editions of the novel separate the segments with only one square Part 1 Beyond the Zero 21 episodes edit The name Beyond the Zero refers to lack of total extinction of a conditioned stimulus The events of this part occur primarily during the Christmas Advent season of 1944 from December 18 26 coinciding in part with the Battle of the Bulge The epigraph is a quotation from a pamphlet written by the rocket scientist Wernher von Braun and first published in 1962 Nature does not know extinction all it knows is transformation Everything science has taught me and continues to teach me strengthens my belief in the continuity of our spiritual existence after death 9 The epigraph reflects themes of anticipated redemption and blurring of the sacred and secular both of which pervade Part 1 10 The epigraph is also potentially ironic given von Braun s central role in the development of Nazi Germany s V 2 rocket Part 2 Une Perm au Casino Hermann Goering 8 episodes edit Une Perm au Casino Hermann Goering is French for A Furlough at the Hermann Goring Casino The events of this section span the five months from Christmas 1944 through to Whitsunday the following year May 20 1945 The misrepresentation or reinterpretation of identity is reflected in Slothrop s journey as well as the epigraph attributed to Merian C Cooper speaking to Fay Wray prior to her starring role in King Kong as recounted by Wray in the September 21 1969 issue of The New York Times You will have the tallest darkest leading man in Hollywood 11 Part 3 In the Zone 32 episodes edit Part 3 is set during the summer of 1945 with analepses literary flashbacks to the time period of Part 2 with most events taking place between May 18 and August 6 the day of the atomic bomb attack on Hiroshima and also the Feast of the Transfiguration The epigraph is taken from The Wizard of Oz spoken by Dorothy as she arrives in Oz and shows her disorientation with the new environment Toto I have a feeling we re not in Kansas any more Part 4 The Counterforce 12 episodes edit Part 4 begins shortly after August 6 1945 and covers the period up to September 14 of that same year the day of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross with extended analepses to Easter April Fool s weekend of 1945 and culminating in a prolepsis to 1970 The simple epigraphical quotation What is attributed to Richard M Nixon and was added after the galleys of the novel had been printed to insinuate the President s involvement in the unfolding Watergate scandal 12 The original quotation for this section in the advance reading copies of the book was an excerpt from the lyrics to the Joni Mitchell song Cactus Tree She has brought them to her senses They have laughed inside her laughter Now she rallies her defenses For she fears that one will ask her For eternity And she s so busy being free so the change in quotation jumped a large cultural divide Plot edit nbsp Launch of a V 2 rocket Part One Beyond the Zero The opening pages of the novel follow Pirate Prentice an employee of the Special Operations Executive S O E first in his dreams and later around the house in wartime London that he shares with several others in the S O E He soon is driven to the site of a V 2 rocket strike Pirate s associate Teddy Bloat photographs a map depicting the sexual encounters of U S Army Lt Tyrone Slothrop an employee of a fictional technical intelligence unit ACHTUNG Slothrop and his background are detailed through discussions by some of his co workers and through references to his family s history reaching back to early colonial times in the Berkshire Mountains of western Massachusetts There are loose parallels to Pynchon s own family history Slothrop s fictional home town of Mingeborough is mentioned for the first time although the town and a young boy named Hogan Slothrop had previously been featured in Pynchon s short story The Secret Integration That family setting will be mentioned several times much later in the novel following the family s decline over time within a Puritan legacy of sterility and death Employees of a fictional top secret psychological warfare agency called PISCES headquartered at a former insane asylum known as The White Visitation investigate Slothrop s map of his presumed sexual encounters in London finding that each location appears to precede a V 2 rocket strike in the same place by several days This coincidence intrigues Pavlovian behavioral psychologist Edward W Pointsman who thinks there may be a direct causal relationship between Slothrop s erections and the missile strikes and his associate statistician Roger Mexico who suggests that the relationship is only a random coincidence of probabilities as seen in Poisson distributions leading to further reflections in this section and later on topics as broad as the occult Determinism the reverse flow of time and the sexuality of the rocket itself Pointsman is all the more intrigued to find that as a baby Slothrop had been subjected to behavioral experiments conducted by a Dr Laszlo Jamf that involved the stimulation of his penis to erections Many characters not significant until later are introduced in Beyond the Zero including one of Dr Jamf s former students Franz Pokler a German engineer who has worked on early German experiments in rocketry and later on the V 2 rocket and Pokler s wife Leni a former student radical Others who appear significant in Part One such as Pointsman s associate Thomas Gwenhidwy and Roger Mexico s girlfriend Jessica Swanlake vanish from the narrative and don t re appear until much later Indeed most of the 400 named characters make only single appearances serving merely to demonstrate the sheer scope of Pynchon s universe 13 Character names sometimes consist of outrageous puns such as Joaquin Stick but may also relate to particular traits of that character or to themes within the novel Some names of historical characters also have thematic relevance Under the influence of sodium amytal administered through Pointsman s maneuvers Slothrop has a hallucinatory flashback to a scene in Boston s Roxbury district References here include Red the Negro shoeshine boy who will much later be known as the Black Power leader Malcolm X and jazz saxophonist Charlie Yardbird Parker both of whom represent a threat to white racism Another fictional character Katje Borgesius is contacted in this section by Pirate in order to bring her to safety from the Continent to England Katje had been a Dutch double agent who infiltrated a V 2 rocket launching battery commanded by a sadistic SS officer named Captain Blicero Blicero had kept Katje and a young soldier named Gottfried as sex slaves in a perverse enactment of the Hansel and Gretel story However Blicero a Teutonic name connoting Death is also revealed to be the code name of a former Lieutenant Weissman White Man who earlier appeared in Pynchon s first novel V He has had an ongoing but now severed relationship with Enzian a Herero he had brought to Germany from German South West Africa now Namibia and who is the leader of a group of Herero rocket technicians known as the Schwarzkommando who had been helping Blicero in his own project to create and fire a rocket Katje on the other hand will come under Pointsman s control in England while as the Christmas season ends Roger Mexico worries about losing Jessica Swanlake to her other bureaucratic and sedate boyfriend Jeremy also referred to as Beaver because of his beard Part Two Une Perm au Casino Hermann Goering Slothrop is sent away by his superiors under mysterious circumstances to a casino on the recently liberated French Riviera in which almost the entirety of Part Two takes place He is in fact being monitored by associates of Pointsman including Katje and a linguist named Sir Stephen Dodson Truck One of the more bizarre Pavlovian episodes involves the conditioning of octopus Grigori to attack Katje Early in part two the octopus attacks Katje on the beach in France and Slothrop is conveniently at hand to rescue her Katje and Slothrop eventually have sex At the Casino he learns of a rocket with the irregular serial number 00000 Slothrop comments that the numbering system doesn t allow for four zeroes in one serial let alone five which features a mysterious component called the S Gerat short for Schwarzgerat black device made out of the hitherto unknown plastic Imipolex G It is hinted that Slothrop s prescience of rocket hits is due to being conditioned as an infant by the creator of Imipolex G Laszlo Jamf Later the reality of this story is called into question as is the very existence of Slothrop s original sexual exploits Meanwhile at The White Visitation Pointsman brings the unit and its mission under his control The unit s nominal commander Brigadier General Ernest Pudding who is haunted by his traumatic memories of World War I is brought to literal submission through sado masochistic rituals with Katje engineered by Pointsman Slothrop becomes increasingly paranoid as old associates disappear He begins to suspect he is being monitored and adopts the persona one of many of Ian Scuffling a British war correspondent He escapes from the casino into The Zone the coalescing post war wasteland of Europe first to Nice in France and then to Switzerland searching for the 00000 and S Gerat In the closing of Part Two Katje is revealed to be safe in England enjoying a day at the beach with Roger Mexico and Jessica as well as Pointsman who is in charge of Slothrop s furtive supervision While unable to contact Slothrop or prohibited from contacting him Katje continues to follow his actions through Pointsman who is showing greater signs of mental instability Part Three In The Zone Slothrop s quest continues for some time as he meets or is chased by other characters compared at various times to such characters as Orpheus and Wagner s Tannhauser He learns more about his own past Dr Jamf s experiments on him and his father s apparent complicity In this section Slothrop comes to doubt that his search for the S Gerat is a Grail quest and finds his paranoia the fear that everything is connected succumbing to anti paranoia the fear that nothing is connected On the way he meets Geli Tripping a self described witch in love with a Russian colonel Vaslav Tchitcherine who had previously worked for the Soviet state bringing the New Turkic Alphabet to central Asia especially Soviet Kazakhstan where he had sought a mystical experience referred to as the Kazakh Light Slothrop and Geli have a near mystical experience at the summit of the Brocken the German mountain that was the setting for Walpurgisnacht in Goethe s Faust Slothrop s travels bring him to Nordhausen in Germany and the Mittelwerk where V 2 rockets were assembled using slave labor from the Dora concentration camp Confronted by the racist American Major Duane Marvy he escapes in a slapstick chase Slothrop meets members of the Schwarzkommando a fictional cadre of African rocket technicians descended from survivors of the Herero genocide of 1904 who were brought to Europe by German colonials An extensive subplot details a schism within the Schwarzkommando one faction is bent on a program of racial suicide while the other finds mystical semi religious meaning in the V 2 rocket Another long subplot details Tchitcherine s past and his quest to hunt and kill Enzian leader of the latter group of Schwarzkommando and it turns out Tchitcherine s half brother With papers identifying him as former German film star Max Schlepzig in Berlin Slothrop adopts an operatic Viking costume with the horns removed from the helmet making it look like a rocket nose cone and is given the name Rocketman One of the people he meets is the American sailor Pig Bodine who or whose ancestors appear in most of Pynchon s other works Bodine commissions Slothrop to retrieve a large stash of hashish from the centre of the Potsdam Conference In the nearby abandoned movie studio that was once the center of the German film industry Slothrop meets Margherita Greta Erdmann a former silent film actress from the era of German Expressionist film now in physical and mental decline Slothrop also comes to meet Gerhardt von Goll a megalomaniac German director who had previously been seen in Britain directing a fake propaganda film featuring Black soldiers in Germany Von Goll is now involved in black market activities In the longest episode of the book we learn more of the history of Franz Pokler who fathered a child Ilse with his wife Leni after being aroused by Greta s image in an erotic scene in Alpdrucken von Goll s masterpiece Greta had also become pregnant in the filming of that scene producing a daughter of her own Bianca While working on the V 2 project Pokler had been coerced into working on the S Gerat by Blicero who was holding Ilse in a concentration camp allowing her to visit Pokler only once a year As Ilse ages over several years however Pokler becomes increasingly paranoid that she is really a series of impostors sent each year to mollify him Pokler s work for Blicero is tied to the history of organic chemistry with its own outcomes in the production of dyes and plastics and the international cartels that would come to control them such as I G Farben and a culture of death in life Slothrop is led by Margherita to northern Germany and onto the Anubis a private yacht named for the Egyptian god of the dead filled with uninhibited European aristocrats Here Slothrop has sex with Margherita s teenage daughter Bianca Margherita along with her partner Thanatz are revealed to know more about the 00000 S Gerat and Imipolex G than they let on Ensign Morituri a Japanese liaison officer tells Slothrop about how Margherita and Thanatz had brought their traveling sado masochistic act to Captain Blicero s rocket battery from which Rocket 00000 had apparently been fired in the spring of 1945 towards the end of the war Margherita spent many days in a mysterious and ambiguously described factory where she was clothed in an outfit made from the erotic plastic Imipolex G Slothrop falls overboard and is rescued by black marketeers heading towards Peenemunde the test site for the V 2 rocket now occupied by Soviet forces Slothrop later returns to the Anubis to find Bianca dead possibly hastening his already hinted at decline He continues his pilgrimage through northern Germany having changed clothing with Tchitcherine arriving at Luneberg Heath and the town of Cuxhaven also sites of tests and launches by Allied forces of captured V 2 rockets On the way he again meets Major Marvy who fails to recognize him At a village festival he is invited by children to don the costume of a pre Christian Pig Hero Plechazunga Meeting Pokler at the abandoned amusement park where Ilse used to meet her father Slothrop finds out more about his childhood and the 00000 It becomes steadily apparent that Slothrop is connected to Laszlo Jamf through Lyle Bland a Slothrop family friend who apparently played a role in funding Jamf s experiments on the infant Slothrop Bland in turn is connected to many threads including pinball machines and the Masons that implicate him as part of an international conspiracy of industrial cartels Slothrop is introduced to and sleeps with Solange a prostitute who is actually Leni Pokler recently freed from a concentration camp herself In the same building Major Marvy has found Slothrop s pig costume and dons it only to be caught sedated and castrated by agents working for Pointsman who believe that Slothrop is still in the suit Major political and social realignments have been taking place throughout The Zone Towards the end of this section several characters not seen since early in the novel make a return including Pointsman who is now in official disgrace as bureaucratic operatives consider how to deal with him Other characters including Pirate Prentice and Katje Borgesius begin to coalesce as a group styling itself as the Counterforce in resistance to the emerging post war industrial military complex Part Four The Counterforce Elements in this section become increasingly fantastic and sometimes self referential the narrator at one point saying You will want cause and effect All right page 663 in the Viking edition before explaining how certain events in Part 3 tie in Despite the efforts of some to save him Slothrop is repeatedly sidetracked until his persona fragments totally more than one hundred pages before the novel s end A flashback reveals how Roger Mexico now in Germany has come to join the Counterforce despite its inherent contradictions as a group organizing against international organizations A long digression gives the story of Byron the Bulb a sentient seemingly immortal lightbulb whose existence links with Dr Jamf and his experiments and to the integration of power companies and their Grid to the network of cartels The Schwarzkommando become reunited and finish construction of their own version of the 00000 rocket There are several brief hallucinatory stories of comic fallible superheroes silly Kamikaze pilots and an Incident in the Transvestites Toilet where Slothrop has been hiding in drag Such incidents may be products of Slothrop s finally collapsed mind or of the increasingly chaotic state of affairs outside the realm of a rising technological class and society that comes to be labeled the Raketen Stadt Rocket State of the future For Slothrop these scenes more or less culminate with his finding and failing to understand a headline announcing the atomic bombing of Hiroshima Tchitcherine is told by his superior officer that he is to head back to the U S S R with some German rocket scientists despite his own misgivings about Marxist dialectics A conference is held by members of the Counterforce which now includes some with questionable pasts personalities or motives such as von Goll Jessica tells Roger that she is going to marry Jeremy Beaver Invited to a dinner at the home of a German industrialist Roger and Pig Bodine manage to escape with the help of some disgusting culinary repartee but it becomes increasingly clear that the Counterforce does not have the capacity to counter the emerging Rocket State in part because the Man has a branch office in each of our brains Some individuals however provide some hope Earlier Slothrop had encountered a young boy on what seems to be a futile quest to find his lost pet lemming Meeting once again it turns out that the lemming has been found Geli Tripping s complete love for Tchitcherine and her connection with the natural organic world contrasts with a flashback in which Blicero explains to Gottfried his obsessive desire to transcend nature and its cycle of infection and death Geli does cast a spell on Tchitcherine that perhaps keeps him from recognizing Enzian when they finally meet averting a potentially fatal encounter The final identification of Slothrop of any certainty is his picture on the cover of an album by obscure English band The Fool another allusion to Tarot which becomes increasingly significant where he is credited as playing the harmonica and kazoo The hundred pages or so of the novel include titled vignettes that summarize events in Slothrop s home town of Mingeborough offer a self referential reading of the Tarot cards for Weismann Blicero who also prepares for a final launch of the 00000 rocket with Gottfried in the nosecone describe failed last minute non rescues by popular culture heroes and allude to the Sacrifice of Isaac and the mythical figures of Apollo and Orpheus As the novel draws to an ambiguous close the launch of the rocket with Gottfried is intercut with scenes contemporary to the novel s publication at the fictional Orpheus movie Theater in Los Angeles managed by a character named Richard M Zhlubb a thinly veiled parody of President Richard Nixon Zhlubb is running a Bengt Ekerot Maria Casares Film Festival Both actors played personifications of Death in Ingmar Bergman s The Seventh Seal and Jean Cocteau s Orpheus respectively overt examples of several possible references in the novel to European modernist cinema The novel concludes as a rocket perhaps Weissman s is frozen in its last moment of descent above the theater where the film being projected has broken and a hymn composed by Slothrop s heretical colonial ancestor William Slothrop is offered nbsp This image of Wernher von Braun is referred to in the narrative giving a quite exact timeframe for some events in the book Style editPoet L E Sissman in his Gravity s Rainbow review for The New Yorker said of Pynchon He is almost a mathematician of prose who calculates the least and the greatest stress each word and line each pun and ambiguity can bear and applies his knowledge accordingly and virtually without lapses though he takes many scary bracing linguistic risks Thus his remarkably supple diction can first treat a painful and delicate love scene and then roar without pause into the sounds and echoes of a drudged and drunken orgy 14 The plot of the novel is complex containing over 400 characters and involving many different threads of narrative which intersect and weave around one another 15 The recurring themes throughout the plot are the V 2 rocket interplay between free will and Calvinistic predestination breaking the cycle of nature behavioral psychology sexuality paranoia and conspiracy theories such as the Phoebus cartel and the Illuminati Gravity s Rainbow also draws heavily on themes that Pynchon had probably encountered at his work as a technical writer for Boeing where he edited a support newsletter for the Bomarc Missile Program support unit The Boeing archives are known to house a vast library of historical V 2 rocket documents which were probably accessible to Pynchon The novel is narrated by many distinct voices a technique further developed in Pynchon s much later novel Against the Day The style and tone of the voices vary widely Some narrate the plot in a highly informal tone some are more self referential and some might even break the fourth wall Some voices narrate in drastically different formats ranging from movie script format to stream of consciousness prose The narrative contains numerous descriptions of illicit sexual encounters and drug use by the main characters and supporting cast sandwiched between dense dialogues or reveries on historic artistic scientific or philosophical subjects interspersed with whimsical nonsense poems and allusions to obscure facets of 1940s pop culture Many of the recurring themes will be familiar to experienced Pynchon readers including the singing of silly songs recurring appearances of kazoos and extensive discussion of paranoia According to Richard Locke megalomaniac paranoia is the operative emotion behind the novel 16 and an increasingly central motivator for the many main characters In many cases this paranoia proves to be vindicated as the many plots of the novel become increasingly interconnected revolving around the identity and purpose of the elusive 00000 Rocket and Schwarzgerat The novel becomes increasingly preoccupied with themes of Tarot Paranoia and Sacrifice All three themes culminate in the novel s ending and the epilogue of the many characters The novel also features the character Pig Bodine of Pynchon s novel V Bodine would later become a recurring avatar of Pynchon s complex and interconnected fictional universe making an appearance in nearly all of Pynchon s novels thereafter Several characters and situations from Pynchon s earlier works make at least brief appearances in the novel Slothrop s fictional home town of Mingeborough Massachusetts was the setting for his short story The Secret Integration which featured a young character named Hogan Slothrop who in retrospect would seem to be Tyrone s nephew Weismann aka Blicero and the story of the Herero genocide appeared in the chapter Mondaugen s Story in V The eponymous character Kurt Mondaugen also reappears in Gravity s Rainbow Some early reviewers even suggested that Gravity s Rainbow was a sequel to Pynchon s first novel playing on the term V 2 17 In Gravity s Rainbow Clayton Bloody Chiclitz is a toy manufacturer accompanying Major Marvy but he appeared later as a defense contract magnate in The Crying of Lot 49 and his company Yoyodyne was introduced in V Pig Bodine also appeared in V but had his origin in Pynchon s early short story Low Lands Bodine or variants on his name and character also appear in later Pynchon novels A very minor character in Gravity s Rainbow Ronald Cherrycoke would seem to be a descendant of the Reverend Wicks Cherrycoke who narrates Pynchon s later novel Mason amp Dixon Critical reception editOn the novel s publication in 1973 it was reviewed in the New York Times by Richard Locke under the headline One of the Longest Most Difficult Most Ambitious Novels in Years Locke compared Pynchon s writing to that of Vladimir Nabokov s and that its technical and verbal resources bring to mind Melville and Faulkner Immersing himself in the destructive element and exploring paranoia entropy and the love of death as primary forces in the history of our time Pynchon establishes his imaginative continuity with the great modernist writers of the early years of this century Locke noted that Pynchon is obviously capable of the most intricate literary structures plots and counterplots and symbols that twist and tangle in time and space but was less impressed by the novel s form the structure is strained beyond the breaking point Reading it is often profoundly exasperating the book is too long and dense despite the cornucopia of brilliant details and grand themes one s dominant feelings in the last one to two hundred pages are a mounting restlessness fatigue and frustration 18 Reviewing the novel in the Saturday Review in March 1973 Richard Poirier stated that At thirty six Pynchon has established himself as a novelist of major importance In the highly positive review Poirier compared Gravity s Rainbow to Moby Dick and Ulysses and that it marks an advance beyond either book in its treatment of cultural inheritance Poirier noted the wide range of Pynchon s writing and said that Pynchon is willing and able that is to work from a range of perspectives infinitely wider more difficult to manage more learned than any to be found elsewhere in contemporary literature His genius resides in his capacity to see to see feelingly how these various perspectives apparently so diverse and chaotic are begotten of the same technology the same supportive structures that have foundations in the theology of the seventeenth century and the science of the nineteenth Pynchon is almost unbearably vulnerable to every aspect of contemporary experience open to every form of sight and sound democratically receptive to the most common and the most recondite signatures of things 19 On the 50th anniversary of the publication in February 2023 John Semley positively reviewed Gravity s Rainbow in Wired noting that It is at once a busy almanac of its era and a sort of field guide for our own It echoes eerily in the new ish millennium In a way our own age s greasy stew of absurdity and apocalypticism creeping death tinged with clown shoe idiocy suggests a world that has finally fatefully caught up with Pynchon We are still living under Gravity s Rainbow 20 The character name Tyrone Slothrop has been read as an anagram of Sloth or Entropy by writer Salman Rushdie 21 Cultural influence edit nbsp Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition with cover art by Frank Miller released October 31 2006Italian scholar Guido Almansi it described it as the greatest American novel published after the end of the Second World War 6 Sascha Pohlmann writing for The Literary Encyclopedia stated that it is often considered as the postmodern novel redefining both postmodernism and the novel in general 22 Literary scholar Tony Tanner has hailed it as both one of the great historical novels of our time and arguably the most important literary text since Ulysses 23 Though the book won the National Book Award for 1974 1 Pynchon chose neither to accept nor acknowledge this award Thomas Guinzberg of the Viking Press suggested that the comedian Professor Irwin Corey accept the award on his behalf to which Pynchon agreed 24 Corey s comical address at the ceremony was also noteworthy for being interrupted by a streaker crossing the stage 25 26 Gravity s Rainbow has been translated to many languages including French as Rainbow 1975 Spanish as El arco iris de la gravedad 1978 German as Die Enden der Parabel 1981 and Serbian as Duga gravitacije 2019 Episodes of the novel have been translated to Japanese 23 Gravity s Rainbow was translated into German by Nobel laureate Elfriede Jelinek and some critics think that it has had a large influence on Jelinek s own writing 27 Adaptations edit According to Robert Bramkamp s docudrama about the V2 and Gravity s Rainbow entitled Prufstand VII the BBC initiated a project to produce a film adaptation of Gravity s Rainbow between 1994 and 1997 Some unfinished footage is included in Bramkamp s film 28 The Bramkamp movie includes other dramatized sequences from the novel as well while the main focus is on Peenemunde and the V2 The 2011 film Impolex by Alex Ross Perry is loosely inspired by Gravity s Rainbow the title referring to the fictional polymer Imipolex G used to condition Slothrop in the novel To commemorate 75 years since the end of World War II in 2019 German public radio broadcasters SWR 2 and Deutschlandfunk produced a 14 hour radio play in German language which was aired in April 2020 Music edit The lyrics of Devo s song Whip It were inspired by Gravity s Rainbow parodies of limericks and poems Gerald Casale specified The lyrics were written by me as an imitation of Thomas Pynchon s parodies in his book Gravity s Rainbow He had parodied limericks and poems of kind of all American obsessive cult of personality ideas like Horatio Alger and You re 1 there s nobody else like you kind of poems that were very funny and very clever I thought I d like to do one like Thomas Pynchon so I wrote down Whip It one night 29 The novel inspired the 1984 song Gravity s Angel by Laurie Anderson In her 2004 autobiographical performance The End of the Moon Anderson said she once contacted Pynchon asking permission to adapt Gravity s Rainbow as an opera Pynchon replied that he would allow her to do so only if the opera was written for a single instrument the banjo Anderson said she took that as a polite no 30 German avant rock group Cassiber incorporated text from the novel in their 1990 album A Face We All Know The use of the text was cleared with Pynchon s agent 31 Pat Benatar released a 1993 album called Gravity s Rainbow after reading Thomas Pynchon s novel citation needed Gravity s Rainbow is a song by the British band Klaxons from the album Myths of the Near Future 2007 American progressive rock group Coheed and Cambria s song Gravity s Union from their science fiction concept album The Afterman Descension 2013 is named in honor of the novel Canadian experimental rock group Rei dos Leitoes s song Silent on the Island 2010 incorporates themes from Gravity s Rainbow in its second and fourth Verse passages David Lowery of the American alternative rock group Camper Van Beethoven cites Gravity s Rainbow as an inspiration for the song All Her Favorite Fruit 1989 32 The group TV Girl s song Taking What s Not Yours from Who Really Cares references having left Gravity s Rainbow at an ex girlfriend s apartment 33 British punk new wave band The Paranoids released Theme From Gravity s Rainbow as the B side to The Love Job Hurricane Records 2 FIRE 14 1980 with a lyric inspired by the novel Produced by Roy Wood 34 American Rock Band The Used released a song sharing the same title as part of their 2020 Album Heartwork Bert McCracken the band s lead singer said that Gravity s Rainbow is one of his favorite books of all time 35 Art edit New York artist Zak Smith created a series of 760 drawings entitled One Picture for Every Page of Thomas Pynchon s Novel Gravity s Rainbow also known by the title Pictures of What Happens on Each Page of Thomas Pynchon s Novel Gravity s Rainbow 36 Occupying eleven rows and over eleven meters of wall space the drawings attempt to illustrate as literally as possible every page of the book The piece includes palm trees shoes stuffed toys a lemon meringue pie Richard Nixon Sigmund Freud an iron toad wired to an electric battery a dominatrix and other images from the novel The series had a successful reception at New York s 2004 Whitney Biennial event and was described as a tour de force of sketching and concept Abbe 2004 In November 2006 Tin House Books published Pictures Showing What Happens on Each Page of Thomas Pynchon s Novel Gravity s Rainbow the book of Smith s Gravity s Rainbow drawings 37 In 1999 a painting by the American artist Fred Tomaselli inspired by the novel and titled Gravity s Rainbow Large was added to the permanent collection at the Whitney Museum of Art in New York City 38 Film edit Benoit Blanc a character in the 2019 American film Knives Out references Gravity s Rainbow before admitting that he had not read it and only name dropped it to give himself gravitas 39 In the standalone sequel Glass Onion the novel physically appears being read by Serena Williams 40 An early scene in the 1988 American film Miracle Mile features a character played by Denise Crosby taking what appears to be a copy of a fictional study guide Cliff s Notes Gravity s Rainbow out of a briefcase and studies it for a short time The film deals with the reaction of characters to an impending nuclear missile attack The novel appears in the film Interstellar 41 Video games edit Speaking about his video game The Witness director Jonathan Blow said I want to make games for people who like to read Gravity s Rainbow 42 He later elaborated 43 Gravity s Rainbow is a very free book in a certain way It doesn t care if you re following along exactly It has a certain freedom and joy to it while also being pretty dark a lot of the time I can t think of a game that has managed this emotional pan spectrality of being very joyful and playful while simultaneously being bleak See also edit nbsp Novels portalCosmic bomb phrase Little Albert experiment Hysterical realism Metafiction Postmodern literatureFurther reading editMendelson Edward 1976 Gravity s Encyclopedia In Levine George David Leverenz eds Mindful Pleasures Essays on Thomas Pynchon Little Brown pp 161 95 Reprinted in Mendelson Edward 1986 Gravity s Encyclopedia In Bloom Harold ed Thomas Pynchon sGravity s Rainbow Modern Critical Interpretations New Haven Chelsea House pp 29 52 References editNotes edit a b National Book Awards 1974 National Book Foundation With essays by Casey Hicks and Chad Post from the Awards 60 year anniversary blog The acceptance speech by Irwin Corey is not reprinted by the National Book Foundation Retrieved 2012 03 29 a b Kihss Peter May 8 1974 Pulitzer Jurors Dismayed on Pynchon The New York Times Retrieved April 20 2017 McDowell Edwin May 11 1984 Publishing Pulitzer Controversies The New York Times p C26 1973 Award Winners amp Nominees Worlds Without End Retrieved 2009 07 06 ALL Time 100 Novels Time October 16 2005 Retrieved 2009 10 15 a b Almansi p 226 piu importante romanzo americano del secondo dopoguerra Gravity s Rainbow di Thomas Pynchon romanzo mai pubblicato in Italia con grande vergogna dell editoria nazionale English translation most important American novel of the second post war Gravity s Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon a novel never published in Italy to the great shame of the national publishing industry Almansi s comment is from 1994 Gravity s Rainbow was translated and published in Italy in 1999 Review of Thomas Pynchon s Gravity s Rainbow Richard Poirier 1973 thomaspynchon com Retrieved 2020 10 29 Howard Gerald Summer 2005 Pynchon from A to V Gerald Howard on Gravity s Rainbow Bookforum Summer 2005 6 7 Von Braun Wernher Why I Believe in Immortality Archived from the original on April 10 2022 in William Nichols ed The Third Book of Words to Live By Simon and Schuster 1962 pp 119 120 Weisenburger Steven 1988 A Gravity s Rainbow Companion Sources and Contexts for Pynchon s Novel University of Georgia Press ISBN 0 8203 1026 3 Retrieved July 12 2018 Weisenburger Part 2 Un Perm au Casino Hermann Goering p 105 The epigraph derives from a New York Times feature of September 21 1969 entitled How Fay Met Kong Pynchon Notes 11 Archived 2006 09 09 at the Wayback Machine February 1983 p 64 Ware Tim Gravity s Rainbow Characters diagram PDF ThomasPynchon com Sissman L E 1973 Hieronymus and Robert Bosch The Art of Thomas Pynchon The New Yorker 49 19 May 1973 pp 138 40 Tanner p 74 There are over 400 characters there are many discernible plots these plots touch and intersect or diverge and separate Richard Locke book review Archived 2013 01 13 at the Wayback Machine for The New York Times Book Review March 11 1973 Mendelson Edward 1978 Pynchon A Collection of Critical Essays Englewood Cliffs NJ Prentice Hall ISBN 9780137447060 Locke Richard 11 March 1973 One of the Longest Most Difficult Most Ambitious Novels in Years New York Times Poirier Richard 3 March 1973 Rocket Power Gravity s Rainbow Reviewed by Richard Poirier 1973 thomaspynchon com Semley John 18 February 2023 We re All Living Under Gravity s Rainbow Wired The New York Times Book Review Search Article archive nytimes com Retrieved 2023 08 30 Pohlmann Sascha Gravity s Rainbow The Literary Encyclopedia First published 24 October 2006 accessed 17 March 2013 a b Steven C Weisenburger A Gravity s Rainbow Companion Sources and Contexts for Pynchon s Novel Introduction University of Georgia Press 2006 Corey Irwin 1996 Professor Irwin Corey Accepts the National Book Award for Thomas Pynchon Pynchon Notes doi 10 16995 pn 188 Witt Emily 2011 11 10 Irwin Corey Thomas Pynchon s Stand in Still Up to His Old Tricks The Observer Professor Irwin Corey s acceptance speech Pynchon Wiki Retrieved 17 February 2023 Konzett p 16 Prufstand 7 Download www pruefstand7 de Retrieved 2023 01 13 Whip It Songfacts com Retrieved 2017 04 07 Papageorge John Laurie Anderson interview Silicon Valley Radio Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2014 07 02 Cassiber s use of Gravity s Rainbow texts The Modern Word Archived from the original on 2012 11 02 Retrieved 2007 05 22 Interview David Lowery of Cracker and Camper Van Beethoven Popgurls com 4 June 2006 Retrieved 2011 06 21 Taking What s Not Yours musixmatch com The Paranoids the Love Job 1980 Vinyl Discogs 1980 Shepherd Tom Bert McCracken The Used Made It Awful for all the True Punk Bands We Weren t Afraid of Radio or MTV Kerrang Smith Zak Zak Smith s Illustrations For Each Page of Gravity s Rainbow The Modern Word Archived from the original on 3 June 2005 Smith Zak 2006 Pictures Showing What Happens on Each Page of Thomas Pynchon s Novel Gravity s Rainbow by Zak Smith Tin House Books ISBN 9780977312795 Retrieved 2019 04 08 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Harris William 1999 12 19 ART ARCHITECTURE He Dropped Out Of Drugs and Put Them in His Art The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 01 13 Knives Out director Rian Johnson explains Daniel Craig s Gravity s Rainbow joke www sfgate com 6 December 2019 Retrieved 2020 02 26 Glass Onion Continues One Of Knives Out s Strangest References screenrant com 30 December 2022 Retrieved 2 January 2023 Valcarel Josh 9 Easter Eggs From the Bookshelf in Interstellar Wired Marsh Calum 27 January 2016 Jonathan Blow I want to make games for people who read Gravity s Rainbow The Guardian Retrieved 7 April 2020 Juul Jesper Interview with Jonathan Blow Handmade Pixels Retrieved 7 April 2020 Sources edit Almansi Guido L estetica dell osceno Madrid Akal 1977 in Spanish ISBN 84 7339 286 8 Booker M Keith Techniques of Subversion in Modern Literature Transgression Abjection and the Carnivalesque University Press of Florida 1991 ISBN 0 8130 1065 9 Konzett Matthias and Margarete Lamb Faffelberger Elfriede Jelinek writing woman nation and identity a critical anthology Madison NJ Fairleigh Dickinson University Press 2007 ISBN 0 8386 4154 7 Levine George Lewis Mindful pleasures essays on Thomas Pynchon Boston Little Brown 1976 ISBN 0 316 52230 9 Moore Thomas The style of connectedness Gravity s rainbow and Thomas Pynchon Columbia University of Missouri Press 1987 ISBN 0 8262 0625 5 Pohlmann Sascha Gravity s Rainbow The Literary Encyclopedia First published 24 October 2006 accessed 17 March 2013 Schwab Gabriele Subjects Without Selves Transitional Texts in Modern Fiction Harvard University Press 1994 ISBN 0 674 85381 4 Tanner Tony Thomas Pynchon London and New York Methuen 1982 ISBN 0 416 31670 0 Weisenburger Steven A Gravity s Rainbow Companion University of Georgia Press 1988 ISBN 0 8203 1026 3External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Gravity s Rainbow A Gravity s Rainbow Companion by Steven Weisenburger Gravity s Rainbow episodes at the Pynchon in Public Podcast Gravity s Rainbow Cover Art Over Time ThomasPynchon com Gravity s Rainbow Wiki PynchonWiki com Gravity s Rainbow review by Ted Gioia Conceptual Fiction Archived 2020 10 05 at the Wayback Machine How to Identify a Gravity s Rainbow First Edition Hardcover and Paperback A PDF map of how characters connect to each other in Gravity s Rainbow AwardsPreceded byChimeraJohn Barth National Book Award for Fiction1974 With A Crown of Feathers and Other StoriesIsaac Bashevis Singer Succeeded byDog SoldiersRobert StonePreceded byAugustusJohn Edward Williams Succeeded byThe Hair of Harold RouxThomas Williams Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index 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