Dalkey Archive Press / Deep Vellum Publishing is re-issuing seven books by Harry Mathews, according to Publishers Weekly, which notes that "the reissued editions will feature new cover designs and never-before-seen archival photographs of the author, as well as introductions by such writers as Jonathan Lethem, Lucy Sante, and Ed Park." Three of the volumes will appear this year, with the others scheduled over the next few years.
I can't help adding, given the current climate in the nonprofit world, "if the money holds out." It's good to see Mathews getting respectful attention, although I wonder how many potential readers of his work are out there who don't already own earlier editions.
Saturday, May 24, 2025
Monday, May 19, 2025
Landscape (Thomas Pynchon)
Thomas Pynchon:
Pynchon is said to have a new book, Shadow Ticket, scheduled for publication later this year.
They took the North Spooner exit and got on River Drive. Once past the lights of Vineland, the river took back its older form, became what for the Yuroks it had always been, a river of ghosts. Everything had a name — fishing and snaring places, acorn grounds, rocks in the river, boulders on the banks, groves and single trees with their own names, springs, pools, meadows, all alive, each with its own spirit. Many of these were what the Yurok people called woge, creatures like humans but smaller, who had been living here when the first humans came. Before the influx, the woge withdrew. Some went away physically, forever, eastward, over the mountains, or nestled all together in giant redwood boats, singing unison chants of dispossession and exile, fading as they were taken further out to sea, desolate even to the ears of the newcomers, lost. Other woge who found it impossible to leave withdrew instead into the features of the landscape, remaining conscious, remembering better times, capable of sorrow and as seasons went on other emotions as well, as the generations of Yuroks sat on them, fished from them, rested in their shade, as they learned to love and grow deeper into the nuances of wind and light as well as the earthquakes and eclipses and the massive winter storms that roared in, one after another, from the Gulf of Alaska.I first read this novel in 1990, shortly after it was published. I thinned one copy out of my library a few years ago but kept this UK edition with cover art by Stephen Martin and jacket design by Peter Dyer. By the time I picked it up the other day to revisit it I remembered little about the book except that it was largely set in California, which makes little illuminations like the one above all the more refreshing.
Vineland
Pynchon is said to have a new book, Shadow Ticket, scheduled for publication later this year.
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Thomas Pynchon
Thursday, May 01, 2025
Thirst
The neighborhood where I grew up was built on a hill overlooking a small artificial lake, and at the summit of the hill, tucked into the woods, stood an old wooden water tower that stored drinking water pumped up from the lake. According to the kind of legend that kids make up and only tell each other, a creature lived inside the tower. What kind of creature it was wasn't made clear — an enormous serpent, a furtive carnivorous mammal, or some beast unknown to zoology — but most of the time it minded its own business, emerged nocturnally if at all, and posed no threat. One summer there was a terrible drought, the lake shrank to a stagnant pond, and the water tower went dry. It was then, one heard, that the creature emerged at night to slake its desperate thirst, and the hideously dessicated corpses of squirrels, cats, and other animals were found in the woods nearby. I'm not sure how it ended. Did a group of men from the neighborhood open the tower and evict its occupant, or did the creature resume its unseen existence when the rains came? The tower must be long gone by now, but I haven't been back.
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