Given that there are books I read last year whose plots are a total blank in my memory, it's not surprising that all I could recall of my 2008 reading of Vineland was Zoyd's autotransfenestrations in exchange for government cheese, and some nonsense about ninjas and Godzilla and UFO's. Turns out, the book's as clear a statement of Pynchon's politics and preoccupying themes as you'll find in his oeuvre. It comes down to "the long, sad, history of L.A. land use", to quote Vineland's cousin-German — but not just L.A., and not just actual, literal land use. It's about the usurpation of dreams by reality, the overwriting, gradually or all-at-once, of liberty by discipline and power; it's about the shutting down of that "parenthesis of light" ( again) that was the 60's, and in the 1984-set Vineland we also get the throughline from Nixon to Reagan, how despite their surface differences they were both manifestations of the same cryptofascist American instinct. It's all here in this intro to the Fumimota office, which:
