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Thomas Pynchon:"Bleeding Edge"
#1
September 18, 2013 [Image: printer.gif]

A Review of Bleeding Edge

[size=12]Into Your Life It Will Creep


by RON JACOBS

The year was 2001. George W. Bush was president. The party for the rich that was the 1990s was nearing its end but nobody wanted to acknowledge it. War was on the horizon and all hell was about to break loose. The Twin Towers fell in September of that year and we were told that our world was forever changed. Thomas Pynchon's latest novel is called Bleeding Edge and it's about the internet, black ops, and the last (dare we hope the final) stage of capitalism. The city is a part of the story, but the real tale has no particular location. Similarly, the events of September 11 are part of the story but do not define it.

This novel is classic Pynchon. There is an undefinable and ever-present paranoia. That paranoia is manifested and maintained by an unnamable and omniscient entity that doesn't only want access to all extant knowledge, but also the power to use it in pursuit of its own omnipotence. The persons being manipulated operate as if they are agents of their own desires and wills, when the facts prove otherwise. Occasionally, a certain clarity pushes through the shadows, but is overtaken by events with shade of their own.[Image: 9780224099028.jpg]

Like many New York novels that aren't about the poor, Bleeding Edge presents a world of private schools, Upper West Side abodes, and New Yorkers who rarely take the subway. Since it's also about capitalism, there's an excess of greed and callousness too. The narrative centers on a decertified fraud investigator whose decertification has led her to an arena that exists in capital's shadows. The fraud she investigates runs from petty credit card skimming to stock manipulations on the scale of the Lehmann Brothers. The story describes a place populated by Russian gangsters and low rent hoods; venture capitalists and the Bernie Madoffs of the market. In Bleeding Edge, the world it situates itself in is also populated by dotcom whiz kids waging internal debates between their desire to keep source code free and their desire to make a bunch of money.

Everywhere one looks is a vulture ready to feast on whatever carcass turns up.

Circumscribing this neoliberal city of the dead is the national security apparatus. As always, its presence is nebulous but palpable, just as it is in real life. In Bleeding Edge it is personified by a fellow named Windust, a walking American neoliberal sleeper cell who has killed dozens, helped take down regimes, fomented counterrevolutions and made a fortune. It's not that he wanted to make a fortune; the ideological satisfaction was enough. However, his bosses give him a cut as a form of blackmail.

Bleeding Edge is about the nexus where neoliberal capitalism, the internet, gangsters and the national security apparatus intersect. It's a shadowy place that Pynchon peppers with his unique brand of humor and song lyrics. There are no winners and nor is there hope, just an ongoing dystopic drama that floats in the edges of out reality. This is why it disturbs us so; because we know it might be real. Indeed, we know it is real even though we can't prove it. This is not one of the Pynchon novels that span time and geography like the masterworks Against the Day and Gravity's Rainbow. Instead it is an examination of a particular moment, like Vineland's look at pot growers in 1980s Humboldt County, California. This doesn't make Pynchon's vision easier to accept, however. In fact, his locating the tale in a single time period actually makes it more real and possibly harder to dismiss than the fantastic worlds of those two novels.

It was almost a century ago that F. Scott Fitzgerald wrote a book about capitalism, greed, gangsters and the American Dream. That book was called The Great Gatsby and described a dream destroyed. That "green light at the end of Daisy's dock" that Fitzgerald's Nick reflects on in that moment never even makes an appearance in Pynchon's Bleeding Edge. Instead, there is only an American dead end that neither Gatsby nor Nick could even begin to consider.

Ron Jacobs is the author of the just released novel All the Sinners, Saints. He is also the author of The Way the Wind Blew: a History of the Weather Underground and Short Order Frame Up and The Co-Conspirator's Tale. Jacobs' essay on Big Bill Broonzy is featured in CounterPunch's collection on music, art and sex, Serpents in the Garden. His third novel All the Sinners Saints is a companion to the previous two and is due out in April 2013. He is a contributor to Hopeless: Barack Obama and the Politics of Illusion, published by AK Press. He can be reached at: ronj1955@gmail.com.

http://www.counterpunch.org/2013/09/18/i...ill-creep/

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"You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete.”
Buckminster Fuller
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#2
Thomas Pynchon is both bard and paranoid chronicler, a deep political poet...

When Joan met Thomas, Tyrone Slothrop was born.
"It means this War was never political at all, the politics was all theatre, all just to keep the people distracted...."
"Proverbs for Paranoids 4: You hide, They seek."
"They are in Love. Fuck the War."

Gravity's Rainbow, Thomas Pynchon

"Ccollanan Pachacamac ricuy auccacunac yahuarniy hichascancuta."
The last words of the last Inka, Tupac Amaru, led to the gallows by men of god & dogs of war
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#3
'Bleeding Edge' has been dismissed by many reviewers either for Pynchon being Pynchon (flat characters, wisecracking, silly songs, wacky jokes etc.) or for being 'Pynchon lite.' Me, I love it. Nobody writes like that. As usual, there is a healthy dose of references to deep politics. As the novel is set in Spring to Fall 2001, 9/11 theories and references to upcoming business opportunities in the Middle East come into play after a while (to be precise: references to upcoming business opportunities in the Middle East come into play well before the towers fall). As I do not have the time to analyse and put into narrative context, I will just give you a few observations and quotes in order to hopefully whet your appetite (I'll leave 9/11 out, because there is just too much here, fictional, unsupported and plausible): The Brock Vond-like villain Nicholas Windust is not FBI. "Something worse, if possible. (...) Windust has been inthere from the jump, a field operative whose first recorded job, as an entry-level gofer, was in Santiago, Chile, on 11 September 1973, spotting for the planes that bombed the presidential palace and killed Salvador Allende." (BE, 108) Interestingly, unlike Brock Vond, Windust turns out not to be beyond redemption after all. The old lefty March, as usual with Pynchon a sympathetic character, offers with regard to the Montauk Project: "I see my share of conspiracy theories, some are patently bullshit, some I want to believe so much I have to be careful, others are inescapable even if I wanted to escape." (BE, 117) I'm thinking about using that quote for my signature around these parts... Later on, our heroine Maxine with the help of a young hacker (and foot fetishist, this being a Pynchon novel) surfs the Deep Web. There she enters an old situation room from the Cold War, probably situated at Montauk Airforce Station. The bird avatar of the colonel on duty explains some things to the visitors: "There is a terrible prison, most informants believe it's located here in the U.S., though we also have Russian input comparing it unfavourably to the worst parts of the gulag. With classic Russian reluctance they will not name it. Wherever it is, brutal is too kind a description. They kill you but keep you alive. Mercy is unknown. It's supposed to be a kind of boot camp for military time travelers. (...) Given the lengthy schooling, the program prefers to recruit children by kidnapping them. Boys, typically. They are taken without consent and systematically rewired. Assigned to secret cadres to be sent on government missions back and forth in Time, under orders to create alternative histories which will benefit the higher levels of command who have sent them out. They need to be prepared for the extreme vigours of the job. They ares starved, beaten, sodomized, operated on without anesthetic. They will never see their family or friends again. If by accident this should ever happen, during an assignment or simply as a contingency of the day, thir standing orders are immediately to kill anyone who recognizes them. Standard strategies for deflecting public attention are considered to be in effect. Rapture by UFOs, disappearance into the correctional system, MKUltra-type programs have all been proven useful as diversionary narratives..." Wow. Preston Nichols/Peter Moon, no? Later on Maxine in some secret corridor leading to the Montauk facilities encounters a creature which just might be one of those time-travelling child assassins... The novel being occupied very much with the internet and surveillance, PROMIS turns up two times, as I seem to remember but cannot find right now. And a lot else: Guatemala 1982, TWA flight 800, DARPANET as part of CoG planning during the Cold War... Ralf P.S. I have to finish this right now. How do I put line breaks in my postings?
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#4
Quote:How do I put line breaks in my postings?

Hi Ralf

If I'm understanding you correctly just hitting the "enter" key will give you the line breaks.

And thanks for the review.I've started reading "Vineland" three times now and love it,but I keep getting distracted.:Read:
"You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete.”
Buckminster Fuller
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#5
I was in a hurry, so I didn't have the time to find out or check FAQs. So, it is "enter" instead of "return"... In many respects, "Bleeding Edge" is a companion piece to "Vineland" which I also love very much. CoG planning/REX 84 figure heavily in that one. Pynchon's big book is of course "Gravity's Rainbow." "Mason & Dixon" is probably at least as good (I haven't yet managed to finish "Against the Day", but this has more to do with me and my time schedule than with the book), if different, but for me nothing compares to the adrenaline rush of first reading GR. Ralf P.S. The preview tells me that "enter" does not work either.
Keith Millea Wrote:
Quote:How do I put line breaks in my postings?
Hi Ralf If I'm understanding you correctly just hitting the "enter" key will give you the line breaks. And thanks for the review.I've started reading "Vineland" three times now and love it,but I keep getting distracted.:Read:
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