Against the Day

Author: Thomas Pynchon

The inimitable Thomas Pynchon has done it again. Hailed as “a major work of art” by “The Wall Street Journal,” his first novel in almost ten years spans the era between the Chicago World’s Fair of 1893 and the years just after World War I and moves among locations across the globe (and to a few places not strictly speaking on the map at all). With a phantasmagoria of chara….Read More

14 Books Similar to Against the Day

The Rings of Saturn

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Vineland

Vineland, a zone of blessed anarchy in northern California, is the last refuge of hippiedom, a culture devastated by the sobriety epidemic, Reaganomics, and the Tube. Here, in an Orwellian… Continue Reading Posted in: California, English Fiction, Northern, United States

Underworld

While Eisenstein documented the forces of totalitarianism and Stalinism upon the faces of the Russian peoples, DeLillo offers a stunning, at times overwhelming, document of the twin forces of the… Continue Reading Posted in: Contemporary Literature & Fiction, Executives, Fiction, History, Literary Fiction

Mason & Dixon

Charles Mason (1728 -1786) and Jeremiah Dixon (1733-1779) were the British Surveyors best remembered for running the boundary between Pennsylvania and Maryland that we know today as the Mason-Dixon Line.… Continue Reading

JR

A biting satire, JR features JR, an eleven-year-old capitalist, who embodies the cash culture he grows up in. The young JR manipulates his meagre economic beginnings including a shipment of… Continue Reading Posted in: Contemporary Literature & Fiction, Fiction, Free Enterprise, Satire

The Divine Invasion

This is Dick's story of the Second Coming, a story of utmost confusion told with wicked humour. Emannuel, son of the god Yah from the star system CY30-CY30B, competes for… Continue Reading Posted in: American, American Fiction, English Fiction, Metaphysical & Visionary Fiction, Religious Science Fiction & Fantasy, Science Fiction

V.

The wild, macabre tale of the twentieth century and of two men—one looking for something he has lost, the other with nothing much to lose—and "V.," the unknown woman of… Continue Reading Posted in: Action & Adventure Fiction, General, Psychological Fiction, United States

The Crying of Lot 49

Suffused with rich satire, chaotic brilliance, verbal turbulence and wild humor, The Crying of Lot 49 opens as Oedipa Maas discovers that she has been made executrix of a former… Continue Reading Posted in: English Fiction, Married Women, United States

Libra

A fictional speculation on the assassination of John F Kennedy. It chronicles Lee Harvey Oswald's odyssey from troubled teenager to a man of precarious stability who imagines himself an agent… Continue Reading Posted in: 1945, Assassins, Biography, Mysteries

The Broom of the System

The mysterious disappearance of her great-grandmother and twenty-five other elderly inmates from a Shaker Heights nursing home has left Lenore Stonecipher Beadsman emotionally stranded on the edge of the Great… Continue Reading Posted in: Fiction, Humorous Literary Fiction, Literary Satire Fiction, Missing Persons, Ohio Cleveland

Oblivion: Stories

Each new book confirms and extends his genius, and this new short story collection is no exception. In the stories that make up OBLIVION, David Foster Wallace conjoins the rawest,… Continue Reading Posted in: American Fiction, Humorous Stories

Gravity’s Rainbow

Tyrone Slothrop, a GI in London in 1944, has a big problem. Whenever he gets an erection, a Blitz bomb hits. Slothrop gets excited, and then, as Thomas Pynchon puts… Continue Reading Posted in: English Fiction, Rocketry, United States

The Pale King

The agents at the IRS Regional Examination Center in Peoria, Illinois, appear ordinary enough to newly arrived trainee David Foster Wallace. But as he immerses himself in a routine so… Continue Reading Posted in: Classic American Literature, Classic Literature & Fiction, David Foster, Fiction, Illinois, Wallace

Mao II

Bill Gray, a famous, reclusive novelist, emerges from his isolation when he becomes the key figure in an event staged to force the release of a poet hostage in Beirut.Mao… Continue Reading Posted in: African American Literary Fiction, English Fiction, Metaphysical Fiction, United States

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