Difference between revisions of "Mason & Dixon Reviews"

 
Line 1: Line 1:
'''06/12/97''' - [[Entropology|The New York Review of Books]]''' - Louis Menand: "By appropriating the loose and baggy forms of Sterne and Swift, Pynchon has found an ideal vehicle for his meditation on the worlds that were lost, and the suffering that was caused, just so people could understand one another better. He has produced a work of cultural anthropology, a ''Tristes Tropiques'' of North American civilization, and an astonishing and wonderful book."
+
'''06/12/97 - [[Entropology|The New York Review of Books]]''' Louis Menand: "By appropriating the loose and baggy forms of Sterne and Swift, Pynchon has found an ideal vehicle for his meditation on the worlds that were lost, and the suffering that was caused, just so people could understand one another better. He has produced a work of cultural anthropology, a ''Tristes Tropiques'' of North American civilization, and an astonishing and wonderful book."
  
 
{{MD Alpha Nav}}
 
{{MD Alpha Nav}}

Revision as of 20:12, 22 December 2006

06/12/97 - The New York Review of Books Louis Menand: "By appropriating the loose and baggy forms of Sterne and Swift, Pynchon has found an ideal vehicle for his meditation on the worlds that were lost, and the suffering that was caused, just so people could understand one another better. He has produced a work of cultural anthropology, a Tristes Tropiques of North American civilization, and an astonishing and wonderful book."

Mason & Dixon Alpha Guide
A·B·C·D·E·F·G·H·I·J·K·L·M·N·O·P·Q·R·S·T·U·V·W·XYZ TOP↑
Personal tools