Gravity's Rainbow
by Thomas Pynchon
Review of Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon

What a great book! Probably the best book
since the post World War 2 Era (1945- 1991) Yes its a complex novel complete with many references to various
scientific, philosophical and mathematical and technological concepts and subjects. Also you will encounter
many awful puns and joyous songs to lighten the intellectual overload you may experience.However despite the
complexity of this book which is slightly overrated I can say that the plot is very exciting. It is basically
about Tyrone Slothrop a agent who becomes immersed in a conspiracy when its found that his erections coincide
directly with missle blast. That is the ultimate paranoiac situatuion I mean imagine everytime that you got a
erection you would have to fear whether a rocket would come down and decimate everything including you, you
would be a paranoid person indeed and thus paranoia is a major theme in this book. Pynchon also beautifully
gives tarot readings of the rocket which gives the rocket a kind of religious significance in a mystical
sense. Definetly the Rockets Bible.
Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon
was reviewed by Wan Quixote

Hard work? Yes. Confusing? Yes. Mind
blowing? Yes. Scary? Yes. Sexy? Yes. Funny? Yes. Long? Yes. Worth perservering with as it will change you
view on how literature can be written? Yes, yes and yes.
Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon
was reviewed by Oberst

An endlessly rewarding book. It's very
difficult, from the rambling, obscure prose, to the plot so complicated that it really doesn't count as a
plot in a typical sense, but once you get used to Pynchon's style it's a blast, though getting used to it
might take you the whole seven hundred something pages. I haven't reread it yet but I started it again a few
months after I finished it and it was magically much more comprehensible and quite fun to read. Pynchon is
probably the smartest writer alive, and while some would throw around the word "pretentious" in discussing a
big, incomprehensible novel like this, Pynchon really doesn't take himself that seriously. He throws in
plenty of intentionally stupid songs, bad puns, exuberantly obscene sex acts, and hilariously bizarre ideas.
What one gets from Gravity's Rainbow is something much more vague and yet more powerful than many
conventional, easy novels.
Gravity's Rainbow by Thomas Pynchon
was reviewed by sl_thr_p

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