In yesterday’s Wall Street Journal, Joseph Bottum reviewed Thomas Pynchon’s new novel Inherent Vice :
Inherent Vice is the closest to beach reading that Thomas Pynchon has ever produced. Of course, take-to-the-beach best sellers are nearly always genre fiction: thrillers and mysteries and romances. Theyre usually competent, typically easy and strictly conventional books: novels by courtesy; narrower in purpose and range than what novel writing is supposed to allow. That doesnt make them bad. It just makes them small. Which raises a question: If the 72-year-old Thomas Pynchon, high-flying author of such iconic works as V. (1963) and Gravitys Rainbow (1973), is reduced to writing genre fictionin this case, a mystery-thriller with an overlay of ironywho is left to write novels? Real novels, that is?
Read the rest . . .