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Inherent Vice

Lee Konstantinou

Thomas Pynchon is back with a surprisingly accessible and (for him) relatively short novel.  Inherent Vice is either a love letter to the counterculture—a lamentation of opportunities lost, hopes closed forever off—or a savage satire of the era’s pretentions.  Possibly both.  The year is 1970, the place L.A, and the times they are a-changin’.  Our hero, stoner private dick Doc Sportello, is often more concerned with smoking dope, peeking up miniskirts, and managing his own ubiquitous hard-ons than with investigating cases.  When an ex asks for help, Doc gets caught up in (that’s right) a paranoid web of intrigue, involving a possibly anticapitalist real estate developer, neo-Nazi bikers, ARPANET, the Warriors Against the Man Black Armed Militia (WAMBAM), a group of possibly murderous tax-dodging dentists, and obscure marine insurance law (from which the title comes), among other things.  It sometimes feels as if Pynchon’s phoning this one in, but he’s one of those writers who’re, like, real good at talking to us over the phone.

Category: Stuff We Like

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One Response

  1. Solyn says:

    Apprceiaiton for this information is over 9000—thank you!

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