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I like James Ellroy. He spoke at the Library of Congress. It was rowdy:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ybc03Fdc8Dw

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Thanks! I have never read him. I definitely have some gaps in my reading history. I don't think I could take his longer works, but I am a big fan of "The Crying of Lot 49." I would describe Pynchon's takes on conspiracy theories as pretty complex.

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Probably because Pynchon seems to subscribe to non-overlapping, maybe even conflicting conspiracy theories.

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It seems like he almost falls into the "deadpan comedy" group, as you can't tell what is a real conspiracy and what is fake or hallucinated.

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Did you read that long discussion by David Mims in Quillette a couple days ago about William Goldman's metafictional novel "The Princess Bride"? I had no idea it was that weird.

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No but I just did. How strange! I never saw the film.

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You should see it. It's quite good. Iconic, in fact.

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"The third camp, the absurdists, who included Joseph Heller, Robert Coover, Donald Barthelme, Barry Hannah, and others, tried and in most cases failed to break the deadlock through deadpan comedy."

Perfectly put. But they were more and less than absurdists and doing more and less than breaking a deadlock. They were telling the bifurcated truth, which is that YES, there are conspiracies afoot and YES, the people who notice them are kooks. Both are true at the same time.

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I have Catch-22 on my bookshelf. Will get to it eventually!

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