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Shadow Ticket

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Milwaukee 1932, the Great Depression going full blast, repeal of Prohibition just around the corner, Al Capone in the federal pen, the private investigation business shifting from labor-management relations to the more domestic kind. Hicks McTaggart, a one-time strikebreaker turned private eye, thinks he’s found job security until he gets sent out on what should be a routine case, locating and bringing back the heiress of a Wisconsin cheese fortune who’s taken a mind to go wandering. Before he knows it, he’s been shanghaied onto a transoceanic liner, ending up eventually in Hungary where there’s no shoreline, a language from some other planet, and enough pastry to see any cop well into retirement—and of course no sign of the runaway heiress he’s supposed to be chasing. By the time Hicks catches up with her he will find himself also entangled with Nazis, Soviet agents, British counterspies, swing musicians, practitioners of the paranormal, outlaw motorcyclists, and the troubles that come with each of them, none of which Hicks is qualified, forget about being paid, to deal with. Surrounded by history he has no grasp on and can’t see his way around in or out of, the only bright side for Hicks is it’s the dawn of the Big Band Era and as it happens he’s a pretty good dancer. Whether this will be enough to allow him somehow to lindy-hop his way back again to Milwaukee and the normal world, which may no longer exist, is another question.

Thomas Pynchon is the author of V.; The Crying of Lot 49; Gravity’s Rainbow; Slow Learner, a collection of short stories; Vineland; Mason & Dixon; Against the Day; and, most recently, Inherent Vice. He received the National Book Award for Gravity’s Rainbow in 1974.

293 pages, Hardcover

First published October 7, 2025

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About the author

Thomas Pynchon

48 books7,828 followers
Thomas Ruggles Pynchon Jr. is an American novelist noted for his dense and complex novels. His fiction and nonfiction writings encompass a vast array of subject matter, genres and themes, including history, music, science, and mathematics. For Gravity's Rainbow, Pynchon won the 1973 U.S. National Book Award for Fiction.

Hailing from Long Island, Pynchon served two years in the United States Navy and earned an English degree from Cornell University. After publishing several short stories in the late 1950s and early 1960s, he began composing the novels for which he is best known: V. (1963), The Crying of Lot 49 (1966), and Gravity's Rainbow (1973). Rumors of a historical novel about Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon had circulated as early as the 1980s; the novel, Mason & Dixon, was published in 1997 to critical acclaim. His 2009 novel Inherent Vice was adapted into a feature film by Paul Thomas Anderson in 2014. Pynchon is notoriously reclusive from the media; few photographs of him have been published, and rumors about his location and identity have circulated since the 1960s. Pynchon's most recent novel, Bleeding Edge, was published on September 17, 2013.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 789 reviews
Profile Image for Vit Babenco.
1,782 reviews5,778 followers
October 22, 2025
Post-noir mystery taking place in the pre-noir times…
Prohibition is about to be repealed… The Great Depression  continues… Everything begins with an explosion…
The explosion when it comes seems to be from somewhere across the river and nearer the Lake. Forks and glassware pause between tabletop and mouth, as if everybody’s observing a moment of stillness, and nobody seems surprised.

A private eye Hicks… And his girl April… A dancer and singer… And her song reveals the mood and climate of the time…
Midnight in Milwaukee,
Not exactly Paris,
Not exactly swilling champagne, twirling yer
cane, down the Champs-Élysées…
Ev’ry hour’s so blue now,
How much, can it matter,
Might as well be suds in a stein,
Any time, night or day…

Many strange things are under way… A submarine in the lake… Weird cheese culture… Everyone around lives one’s own trashy variation of life… The atmosphere is grotesquely inhumane… Clandestine activities are in prime… Hicks feels he is being hunted by a party unknown… He is sent abroad on a mission to find a very special girl…
“How inconvenient for you, to come all this way for so much less than nothing, and in the middle of a world Depression too,” shaking her head slowly. “You seriously believed everything they told you? For a beat-up old-timer you’re pretty naive.”

Quite soon Hicks’s assignment becomes even more complicated…
Hamburg, once the Swing Kid metropolis, is especially depressing for Daphne to visit. Dockyard neighborhoods solidly Social Democratic and Communist are suddenly all infested with brownshirts, singing Nazi lyrics to the tune of “The Internationale,” “Auf Hitlerleute, schließt, die Reihen” and so forth, known as the “Hitlernazionale.”

“Soldiers of Hitler, close the ranks.”
Inhumanity begets more inhumanity until it ends up in a chain reaction of destruction.
Profile Image for Marc Kozak.
269 reviews151 followers
Want to read
April 9, 2025
Googling "new Pynchon novel" every month for the last 12 years FINALLY PAID OFF, LET'S GO!!!
Profile Image for Meike.
Author 1 book4,943 followers
November 12, 2025
At 88 years old, Pynchon - much like Philip Roth, Cormac McCarthy, and Don DeLillo perpetually ignored by the Nobel Committee - demonstrates how many fucks he has to give about the stuffy literary establishment by crafting the The Great American Cheese Novel. Set in 1932, "Shadow Ticket" is an embrace and a satire of the noir private eye thriller, a sprawling narrative that shows America as one big absurd theater - and while the novel lacks the focus of Inherent Vice, it also thrives on vibes and amps up the bizarre. Our protagonist Hicks McTaggart, a private detective in Milwaukee, is assigned the task to find his former flame Daphne, daughter of the mighty Al Capone of Cheese, and her lover, a clarinetist in a swing band. Hicks himself loves to dance and has a fling with singer April, and all the music and flamboyance are juxtaposed with bombings, a mafia war, and the rise of the Nazis.

Yes, there is too much going on here, and there are too many characters (a decent amount of them superfluous for the plot) and too many ideas - but that's the whole point, this is maximalist storytelling in black and white images. Hicks ends up in Eastern Europe, where people are of course called Dr. Zoltan von Kiss and gangs "The Vladboys". There are agents and U-boats and Nazis and a coup and a golem. People talk like right out of a pulp novel (this could be the last Quentin Tarantino movie, the plot is certainly insane enough!). Pynchon seems to run in every direction simultaneously, there's no restraint whatsoever. The text thrives in witty conversations and the surreal scenes it brings to live, it's a postmodern mosaic that refuses to fit into a seamless picture.

It's pointless to seek one message here: This is about the joy of storytelling that stands against the rise of evil. Because there is one thing that dictators fear: To be ridiculed, to be shown as puppets in an absurd show. Here lies the subversive potential of comedians, and also of writers: Pynchon laughs at agitprop, he gives us wicked art. The Nazis would be appalled, and MAGA would be, too, if they knew who Thomas Pynchon was. Sure, this novel revels in comedic joy more than anything, but if you're writing like Thomas Pynchon plus you have an oeuvre like his to offer that accomodates such a text in its complex tapestry, this can be enough.
Profile Image for None Ofyourbusiness Loves Israel.
873 reviews175 followers
October 15, 2025
A Milwaukee private detective named Hicks McTaggart is trudging through the Prohibition hangover years of the 1930s, when the city still smells faintly of bathtub gin, fish fry, and quiet corruption. He works for the comically named Unamalgamated Ops, a detective agency run by Boynt Crosstown, a man so greasy he could power a Buick.

Hicks's job consists mostly of marital snooping and small-time hoodlum-watching, until an explosion rocks the city. A "pineapple job" that looks suspiciously Italian, except it isn't. Milwaukee's police, mobsters, insurance men, and dairy moguls all start pointing fingers, and Hicks finds himself knee-deep in the sort of mystery that makes even Midwestern virtue start to look like racketeering.

What begins as a hunt for a missing cheese heiress and a bombed-out truck quickly turns into a symphony of political paranoia, bootlegging vendettas, fascist flirtations, and small-town sin, all filtered through Hicks's weary gallows humor.

Between mobsters with poetic nicknames, cops with ideological hangovers, and jazz singers who double as philosophers of heartbreak, Pynchon turns Milwaukee into his latest American funhouse of conspiracy and coincidence. Hicks bumbles through it with the half-heroic grace of a man who knows the real mystery isn't the case file but the century itself.

Shadow Ticket feels like The Maltese Falcon got drunk on old schnapps. It is noir fermented in Pynchonian brine: every page a cocktail of corruption, cosmic coincidence, and corny slang shaken until reality itself hiccups. The prose has that familiar Pynchon fizz, half prophecy, half slspstick pratfall. A detective can't light a cigarette without setting off an existential crisis, and a punchline might also wake up the Chicago mob or sleeper Nazi cells.

It's both a parody and a resurrection of hardboiled America, that sweet, smoky mythology of gumshoes and molls and moral rot under neon. But Pynchon being Pynchon, he spikes the genre with dairy metaphysics, union-busting theology, and the slow, curdling madness of capitalism. Even the cheese has a political agenda.

The plot slaloms through Prohibition-era Milwaukee as if Raymond Chandler had been born on a barge of Schlitz. The gumshoe in question is marinating in mysteries, pickled in his own bewilderment. Around him whirl gangsters, fascists, and women with voices like cigarette smoke and bad decisions. It's noir, yes, but filtered through the cracked lens of history, and every streetlight glows with radioactive irony.

A gallery of wanderers, hustlers, and dreamers drifts across Europe as if caught in a slow-motion crime spree against geography itself. Bruno Airmont, a Milwaukee cheese magnate turned fugitive tycoon, arrives first. He flees the Midwest's criminal investigations and lands in Fiume, that border-town purgatory between Fascist Italy and the newborn Yugoslavia, 'Currently in Dispute,' according to his postal address. There he buys a villa crawling with smugglers, nudists, jewel thieves, and secret policemen, every window alive with sin and politics. The place becomes his accidental kingdom, where dairy empires and espionage share a dining table.

Hop Wingdale, a jazz clarinetist with a side hustle in intelligence, travels Europe under cover of a 'motorcycle tour,' charting escape routes out of the continent for whoever can pay. He dodges Hungary, haunted by the mad bomber Matuska, and barrels through Geneva, Fiume, and the Balkans in a top-heavy road-Pullman that looks like a neon locomotive.

Daphne Airmont, Bruno's runaway daughter, crosses his path in the chaos of Fiume, where she befriends Adrijana, a cigarette worker who charms her with a half-sung, half-cursed local song. Later, in a Yugoslav roadhouse, Daphne sings it again, only to hear a clarinet join in, Hop Wingdale, who turns the tune into klezmer and fate.

Meanwhile, Hicks McTaggart, the novel's perpetually weary detective, follows his own trail across the Atlantic aboard the Stupendica, a liner full of chorus girls and minor royalty. He drinks Sidecars beneath a mural of the ship charging through lightning and listens to gangsters discuss European recovery plans between sips of gin. In Vienna he's cornered by a seer predicting that 'Europe trembles with fear but with desire,' and in Budapest he hears of fences connected to Bruno's vanished fortune.

Paris closes the loop: Daphne and Hop's band, the Klezmopolitans, play smoky, fading gigs at the Hotel Grand Pignouf while dreaming of escape to Zurich. By then, their European tour has become a rehearsal for exile.

Apart from the author himself, no one can follow all the steps of the plot, but you know you're in the arms of a master prankster who's been laughing at the American century for sixty years. It's baffling, excessive, and occasionally brilliant enough to make you spill your Pabst. Cheeseheads especially would find the countless inside jokes remarkably funny.

It's a gangster novel that keeps tripping over philosophy, a detective story where every clue points to our own bewilderment, and a love letter to the long, loony dream of America, signed, sealed, and slightly inebriated by Thomas Pynchon, our last poet of beautiful confusion. No one's innocent, everyone's on the take, and the only dependable thing in town is the smell of sauerkraut.


"...Der Führer," gently, "is der future, Hicks. Just the other day the Journal calls him 'that intelligent young German Fascist.'" "They called me Boy Inspiration of the Year once, look where it got me." "You can't trust the newsreels, you only think you've seen him, the Jews who control the movie business only allow footage that will makehim look crazy or comical, funny little guy, funny walk, funny mustache, German Charlie Chaplin, how serious could he be? But there also exist other Hitler movies, yes, some even filmed in color, home movies, a warmer, gayer Hitler, impulsive, unorthodox, says whatever comes into his head, what's wrong with that?" "Jumpin up and down all nutty and screaming the minute anybody brings up the topic of Jews, sure, everybody's welcome to their own sense of humor..."
Profile Image for Cody.
988 reviews300 followers
October 9, 2025
Not that there ever is, but there will be ZERO objectivity in the following. Why would there be?

I’ve made no bones about the outsized role/influence Pynchon played in my formative years, namely 16ish and within that wheelhouse of formal Self cementing. He was the logical progression after Vonnegut and, seeing as it was 1993, there was no this (waves arms around), no community of likeminded ideological miscreants; he hit right in that slipstream of helping me define not WHO I was/am, but HOW I went about approaching that and the world. That’s to say how to be anything at all. As a kid with a head overstuffed with acid that had begun turning on me, the possibilities of escape and sublimation made available through my high school library’s copy of Gravity’s Rainbow (quickly absconded and never returned; eat shit, Lions!) laid out—however cryptically to a kid not far out from his ‘Beat’ phase—that while both the game and, crucially, I might be totally fucked, hey—that didn’t mean that there weren’t avuncular misadventures ahead.

What’s this got to do with Shadow Ticket? Nothing if you’re not me/everything if you are, ain’t it. Take this as my testimonial to Pynchon, the radical humanist hiding beneath the foxglove of historical fuckery, and all who have sailed her (mixing metaphors): Shadow Ticket is a GIFT. It’s impossible not to read it as a swansong, what with Pynchon busily approaching 90 at the time of this writing. The novel is not sop to fans, rather a further peek behind the carefully draped Oz’s exterior, one which we (I’ll own up to fueling it 25-30 years ago) have diligently and slavishly built as an altar of inscrutable hieroglyphics, abstract mathematics, crytpoid-historico-pan disciplinary mirrors that do not accurately reflect the man, but rather a version of ourselves that we congratulate into ‘getting.’ Great. I don’t care. The idea that there is a (banana) cottage industry of skeleton key writers and online asexuals wasting your money and their lives explaining to you what is on a given Pynchonian page tickles me raw. It’s just the type of absurdity that I have to imagine TP would find hilarious if he could be bothered at all—it’s all RIGHT THERE, on the page.

These here pages contain all of the heretofore ‘Pynchons’ (I have no time for the idea of the Pynchon Lite Brigade) you’ve known. Lyrical, dense, slapsticking, humane, affable, prophetic, learned, learning, and someone that has chosen, perhaps more carefully than any author in history, how much of himself he ever cared to share. It’s a hell of a neat trick, and, for the long-game, no one will ever beat him at it (though one errs toward him preferring just a life AND writing, not the edifice we’ve built in his favor and without his egging).

You’ll find no denser 300-page novel, yet the whole thing, impossibly, carries all of its own weight. It is light given a dense, material form; looks not unlike a tickling feather. It is just a Joy Creation, one that leavens the Whole Beautiful Project that's been ongoing since V.. And if it proves to be the chord he chose to go out on, there is no better, no more idiosyncratically weird, American, fucked-and-jazzed-up 1930s uke-banjo’s suspended Ebmin conjoined with its polychordal C7#9b5th inversion possible (right hand aloft, clutching a lit OP) for fading to black on, its plangent tonal clusters hanging over all our smoke-filled lounges and interior chemical dens of yesterdays, this exact moment, and onward into that PerfectSoundForever copywritten and answering to "Oblivion."





*This unalloyed SPLAT of thought is way too long and boring even to me to reread much less correct; take it, as intended, straight to the head. “Believe it if you need it/if you don’t just pass it on,” friends; it really has been a ribbon and a gas. Or, This Machine Kills "The Charge of the Pynchon Lite Brigade."
Profile Image for Jonathan.
1,009 reviews1,229 followers
October 11, 2025
Look, Buddy, it’s simple. If you like his schtick you’ll like his schtick, capiche? What with them Nazis, PT Barnums, criminals and fuck-wits running things these days, a dose of TP does ya good.
Profile Image for Jonfaith.
2,145 reviews1,745 followers
October 12, 2025
People are keeping company here who, if history had a shred of decency, would never be allowed within miles of each other. Rogue nuns in civilian gear are two-stepping with bomb-rolling Marxist guerrillas.

There is only The Zone. Despite my cringing at the Grabers and Pinker of the world—you really think so—I find myself dazzled at the possibilities sketched by Pynchon, admittedly moments before OSSification and the subsequent ledgers have been adjusted.

My reading of this was tempered stress, exhaustion and the darkened passages of insomnia. That’s on me and not this dynamic novel which links the oeuvre of an American Master amidst a chronology of despair. Yet amidst the gyroscopes and motorcycle maintenance there’s a Lindy hopping PI set wayward from Wisconsin to the ruins of Hapsburg hubris as the high tide of totalitarianism is but five years in the future. Oh but the newsreels can’t be trusted. We all know who controls that industry.

The novel is a picaresque treatment of emerging technologies. It is light with a seductive backbeat and yet it harkens, it alarms. Unresolved history is paved over by gallant programs of political economy. Of course the focus on apports —the phenomenon of objects disappearing and appearing is well suited for a gumshoe protagonist, the stuff dreams are made of, especially given the author’s truck with Heisenberg.

Alongside the international cheese cartels, the cocaine and the ghosts of vaudeville past, are lingering lessons of our bruised albeit resilient humanity.
Profile Image for Tom Mooney.
917 reviews398 followers
September 18, 2025
A new Pynchon, who'd have thought it. Is it any good? Well that depends if you dig Pynchon already. Large parts of this are at the more accessible end of his catalogue. Most of it is sort-of understandable, if you keep your wits about you and dampen down your ADHD.

What's it about? A PI of sorts called Hicks McTaggart, who winds up in all manner of difficulties involving a wild cast of characters and locations: a cheese heiress, English spies, Milwaukee gangsters, pesky Feds, suspicious cops, bomb-makers, apportists... and literally loads more. Milwaukee, Chicago, New York, the Mediterranean, Hungary and home.

I didn't get everything that was happening, but if you understand everything in a Pynchon novel there's something wrong with you. The story is a bit manic and all over the place - again to be expected. The style, however, is fucking ace. His sentences always entertain and the dialogue is evocative and often hilarious.

A must read for Pynchon fans... I just can't decide if I am one. Anyway, a great privilege to get to read this ahead of publication and it has given me the confidence to revisit those books in his back catalogue I found intimidating years ago.
Profile Image for Alan.
718 reviews288 followers
October 11, 2025
Had to knock this one out this week. Not Pynchon at his “best”, but then again, there is a certain mode of reading with him where you are not following along anything, but giving yourself over to the journey. Branch upon branch upon branch. The trunk is out of sight. You are not sure what is going on. One moment, you are with Hicks McTaggart getting his “ticket” (the case he has been assigned to) and being ready to set out to find the daughter of the “Al Capone of cheese”. The next, you are reading about submarines, Nazis, Bulgaria, cruise ships, and native bonds. And lots of Pynchonian songs. More than one can handle. He loves a song! That being said, this is probably his least difficult novel that I have ever read. And you remain somewhat sane, as Hicks is with you throughout the process, only disappearing for a chapter or two here and there.
Profile Image for Alexander Carmele.
475 reviews418 followers
December 3, 2025
Lapidar-lakonisches Irren und Wirren durch die Welt der 1930er. Despektierlich erzählt.

Ausführlicher, vielleicht begründeter auf kommunikativeslesen.com

Inhalt: 1/5 Sterne (Abgehalfterter Prügler irrt herum.)
Form: 4/5 Sterne (bunter Sprachreigen)
Erzählstimme: 1/5 Sterne (lässig-desinteressiert-urteilend)
Komposition: 1/5 Sterne (keine)
Leseerlebnis: 1/5 Sterne (schlimm)
--> 8/5 = 1,6 -> knapp 2 Sterne.

Schattennummer von Thomas Pynchon erweist sich als Rhapsodie auf die Prohibitionszeit, als eine Art Tribut an den hardboiled Roman, die Detektiv-Coolness, eine Film-Noir-Szenerie, die leider niemals zum Showdown, zu einer Art Höhepunkt führt. Pynchon lässt in Schattennummer keinen Zweifel daran, dass der Erzähler über den Dingen steht und im Grunde auch gar keine richtige Lust mehr darauf hat, etwas auszuerzählen. Andeutungen müssen reichen.

«Hicks, du brauchst mehr Kultur, eine europäische Einstellung zur Liebe und zum Leben. Du solltest wenigstens rausfinden, womit Bela sein Haar pflegt.» Und so weiter.
«Bomben kommen, Bomben gehen, die Handelskammer von Santa Flavia ist nicht mehr so wichtig, schreib mir einen kurzen Bericht, aber das sind bloß Kinkerlitzchen, ich hab uns was Fabelhaftes an Land gezogen, und ich sage dir, damit sind wir alle gemachte Männer …» Und so weiter.
Bevor er jemand findet, mit dem er reden kann, gibt es einen lauten Knall, und sofort rennen die Leute in alle Richtungen und schreien: «Da sind sie wieder», «Rette sich, wer kann» und so weiter.

40x taucht diese Wendungen auf. Pynchon beweist mit Schattennummer eindrücklich, wie ein Erzähler alles dafür unternimmt, seinem Publikum zu missfallen. Die Abwehrgeste durchflirrt resolut den Text. Weder die Figuren noch die Handlung noch die Zusammenhänge können und sollen überzeugen. Das Flickwerk existiert als Molestum, Ärgernis, als Provokation. Wer will schon eine Story, eine Figur, wer will im Zeitalter des Todes der großen Erzählungen Erzählungen? Schattennummer begräbt sich selbst samt seinem Titel, denn der Roman von Pynchon stellt tatsächlich eine Schattennummer dar: nichts zu sehen, vor lauter Finsternis, malt es euch doch selbst aus.

«Unser erster Auftrag –» «Unser, das heißt … meiner und Ihrer.» «– besteht darin, eine ziemlich geschmacklose Tischlampe zu lokalisieren und ihrem Besitzer zurückzuerstatten, eine Lampe, die unter Lampensammlern als das Kronjuwel geschmackloser Lampen gilt, ja als eine so verblüffend geschmacklose Lampe, dass sie die Kategorie der geschmacklosen Lampe selbst ad absurdum führt. So entsetzlich geschmacklos, dass sie niemals fotografiert worden ist.

Selbstredend nimmt Pynchon sein Publikum hops, selbstredend nimmt er nichts von dem ernst, was er da hinpinselt und selbstredend steckt da eine ganz hintergründige, subversive, poststrukturalistische Ironie dahinter. Nur zu welchem Ende? Der Roman, der sich weder rahmt, noch traut, noch verknüpft, sondern eine Varieté-Nummer ohne Spektakel bleibt? Dazu noch viele Details aus früheren Romanen wie V., die die Lektüre zu einem staccato-haften Déja-vu-Erlebnis geraten lassen. In Schattennummer bleibt so ziemlich alles im Dunklen. Wer darin gerne herumtappen will, nur zu – irgendetwas lässt sich ja immer finden. Ist ein bisschen wie Nasenbohren …

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Details – ab hier Spoilergefahr (zur Erinnerung für mich):
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Inhalt:
●Hauptfigur(en): Hicks McTaggart (HM), Privatdetektiv, Milwaukee, Anfang der 1930er, während der Prohibition.
●Zusammenfassung/Inhaltsangabe: HM hat (vor Handlungsbeginn) die Käseprinzessin Daphne Airmont (DA) vor der Klapsmühle gerettet, und zwar mit einem Schnellboot von seinem Onkel Lefty (Detlef). Im Zuge des Verschwindens ihres Vaters, Al Capone des Käses, möchte sein Chef, Boynt Crosstown von der Filiale der Unamalgamated Op, dass HM DA aufspürt, denn diese soll mit einem Klarinettisten einer Swingband durchgebrannt sein (Hop Wingdale). Als eine Explosion in Milwaukee hochgeht und ein Schmuggler, Stuffy Keegan, lahmgelegt wird, gerät HM ins Kreuzfeuer des FBIs, die ihm den Bombenanschlag unterzujubeln versucht, und zudem verübt einer der Mafiabosse, Don Peppino, eifersüchtig auf seine Affäre mit April Randazzo ist, einen Mordanschlag auf ihn, so dass er sich nun doch überreden lässt, den Auftrag anzunehmen, Milwaukee zu verlassen und nach Daphne zu suchen. Er reist mit dem Zug nach New York, verbringt dort ein paar Tage, wird mit k.o.-Tropfen betäubt und findet sich alsbald auf der Stupendica wider, einem Hochseedampfer. Über Tanger fährt er nach Wien lernt doch seinen hiesigen Auftraggeber Egon Praediger kennen, der ihn nach Budapest schickt und ihn auf Ace Lomax, Bruno Airmonts, Daphnes Vaters Kontaktmann, ansetzt. HM lehnt dankend ab, reist aber nach Budapest, lernt über Terike, eine Motorrad-Botin und -Fanatikerin Slide Gearheart kennen, einen freischaffenden Auslandskorrespondenten, der ihm verrät, wo DA auftritt. HM findet sie und erfährt, dass ihr Klarinettist HW ausgebüchst ist. Sie verbringen eine Nacht miteinander und er nimmt ihren Auftrag an, HW für sie zu suchen, um, statt eine Scheidung zu finalisieren, mal auch ein Paar wieder zusammenzubringen. Über Slide erfährt er, dass sich HW auf einer Motorradrundfahrt befindet. Slide organisiert einen fahrbaren Untersatz. Zusammen mit einem jüdischen Golem namens Zdenek brausen sie Richtung Adria. In einem transsylvanischen Dorf, das sich um ein Ersatzteillager herum gebildet hat, erfahren sie, dass HW in einem kroatischen Guerilla-Camp der Ustascha auftritt, in das auch Lomax verschleppt wird. Zdenek befreit beide. Alle treffen sich in Fiume wieder, wo Daphnes Vater in einer Villa Partys schmeißt. Bruno flieht. DA hat ihm eine Überfahrt organisiert. Er wird zurück in die USA geschleust. HM erhält die Nachricht, dass AR nun fest mit dem Mafiaboss liiert ist. Es gibt nichts mehr, was ihn zurück in die USA zieht. In Sizilien telefoniert er mit seiner Mutter. Er trifft Terike. Sie küssen sich; am Ende erhält er einen Brief von Skeet, der sich auf dem Weg nach Kalifornien befindet.
… Hauptthema: Hicks, in prekären Umständen aufgewachsen, Faust des Kapitals, entsagt der Gewalt. Immer wieder soll er Gewalt anwenden, aber er wehrt sich. Er will nicht Teil dieses Spiels werden. Hicks die Komponente, die sich von den verschiedenen Seiten nicht fangen lässt, weder vom Kommunismus noch vom Kapitalismus, weder von Faschisten noch von den Bolschewisten, weder vom FBI noch MI6, und schon gar nicht vom organisierten Verbrechen. Eine Welt aus dem Ruder – der Holocaust im Anzug. Die Geldmacherei.
… Nebenthema: die Sehnsucht, Nostalgie, das Paar-Sein mit April, das nicht zustandekommt, weil sie die Partnerin eines Gangsterbosses wird (aber kaum ausgeführt).
… Motive aus anderen Büchern (V.): Maschinen besessene Frauen (Motorrad/Auto), Schönheitsoperation; unterirdische Labyrinthe in Städten;
... unklar, wie Hicks nach Fiume kommt.
… unklar, welche Intrigen Bruno zur Flucht zwingen
… unklar, was es mit der InKäs
… welche Rolle spielt Al Capone, wozu? Prohibition? Wozu? Erster Weltkrieg?
… unklar, wozu Pip und Alf, die Apport-Magie? Welche Rolle hat das Teleportieren?
… die Handlungslinie: Glow/Porfirio und Skeet und Stuffy Keegan, völlig überflüssig, die U-13 Geschichte. Tragschrauber? Moto Guzzi? Die Suche nach der geschmacklosen Lampe?! Ace Lomax, keine Story?
… was soll die Inzestphantasie-Andeutung von Daphne?
… unklar, inwiefern Hop Spion war oder nicht. Wer hat die Bombe gelegt, die Stuffys Wagen zerstört hat?
●Charaktere: (rund/flach) – flach und uninteressant, nur Skizzen
●Besondere Ereignisse/Szenen: Nostalgie-Szenen, April und Hicks auf dem Dampfer, atmosphärisch, auch beim Abschied auf dem Bahnhof.
… große Ähnlichkeiten, am Ende, zu Die Projektoren von Clemens Meyer, Atmosphäre der Gewalt auf dem Balkan, vermischt mit Musik, Kino, mit Faschismus/Kommunismus/Extremismus und hinzukommen ein Paar
●Diskurs: Politischer Extremismus, aber eher oberflächlich.
… es gab im Grunde genommen keinen Plot – die Handlungslinie: Daphne einst gerettet, Daphne entflohen, Hicks im Schlamassel, sucht Daphne, verbringt Nacht mit Daphne, die sich absetzt, und dann tröstet er sich mit einer Motorrad-Botin … äh … gähnend langweilig.
--> 1 Stern

Form:
●Wortschatz: großer interessanter, dynamischer Wortschatz, variabel, aus vielen Feldern, nicht fehlverwendet, treffsicher in Abstraktionsabstufungen
●Type-Token-Ratio: 0,1775 (Musil >0,25 - Genre < 0,1)
●Satzlängen-Verteilung-Median: 17,2 STAB 17, Median 11 … komplexer Satzbau, interessante Varianten, Retardierungen des Sinnes, der Auflösung, sinfonische, kompositorische Schreibweise, leider oft gewollt, oft gekünstelt. (bei Musil: 28 Wörter mit Standardabweichung (STAB) 19 Wörter)
●Anteil der 1000 häufigsten Wörter: 71,3 (Musil/Mann <70% - Genre >80%) … Wortreichtum, platzt förmlich aus allen Nähten, mehr ein Wörterbuch als ein Roman, beinahe Arno Schmidt-mäßig, verspielt.
●80% Abdeckung mit wie vielen Wörtern: 2423 Wörter … sehr hoch, in den Bereich von hochkomplexer Literatur
●Auffälligkeiten: ja, gewollt lange Sätze, viele Dialoge, wenig lange, reflektorische Abschnitte, eigentliche keine Reflexion, im Grunde völlig Immersion, Distanzlosigkeit, Atemlosigkeit, Kessel Buntes, Zirkus, Karneval.
●Innovation: dennoch vom Material hoch.
--> 4 Sterne

Erzählstimme:
●Eindruck: Kommentierend, lapidar, überheblich. Kürzt ab, urteilt scharf, interessiert sich nicht wirklich für seine eigene Welt, daher destruktiv, lakonisch und auf Coolness setzend, eher defensiv und habituell – poserhaft; possenreißerisch.
●Erzählinstanz (reflektiert, situiert, perspektiviert?): weder noch
●Erzählverhalten, -stil, -weise: siehe oben, destruktiv gegen die eigene Erzählwelt, abbreviativ, desinteressiert, kalt … desillusioniert.
●Einschätzung: es gibt keine Regie, nicht mal das, eine Montagetechnik, die etwas zusammenwebt, was nicht unbedingt miteinander harmoniert. Ein Stück- und Flickwerk. Slapstick-Noir, eine Erzählstimme, die sich selbst unterläuft, keinen Rahmen besitzt
--> 1 Stern

Komposition:
●Eindruck (szenisch/deskriptiv/Tempiwechsel): interessant durch rapide Wechsel, die auf Dauer ermüden, da es keine Perspektive, keinen Rahmen, keine Handlung gibt.
●Extradiegetische Abschnitte: nicht wirklich.
●Lose Versatzstücke: viele Fäden finden nicht zusammen – die Magie (Apport/Asport), die seltsamen Intrigen, die nicht aufgeklärt werden.
●Reliefbildung: am Ende kaum, da alles nur angedeutet wird.
●Einschätzung: keine rahmende Figur, keine rahmende Handlung, keine strukturelle Bindung. Totalausfall.
--> 1 Stern

Leseerlebnis:
●Gelangweilt: ja, sehr.
●Geärgert: nö, zu belanglos.
●Amüsiert: an manchen Stellen, durch Wortwitz, Karnevalismus.
●Gefesselt: nein, nur ein wenig, als die Affäre mit April auseinandergeht, Bahnhof- und Dampferszene.
●Zweites Mal Lesen?: auf keinen Fall.
--> 1 Stern

--------
Profile Image for Paul Dembina.
694 reviews163 followers
October 28, 2025
Welcome back Mr Pynchon!

Another thoroughly entertaining read from one of my absolute favourite authors.

Who'd have thought an octogenarian would have had it in them. I suppose it's probably too much to ask to expect another novel from the man at some future date?
Profile Image for Doug.
2,547 reviews913 followers
October 20, 2025
3.5, rounded up.

I don't count myself amongst the Pynchon super-fans. I read his first 3 novels 50 years back when they first came out and, frankly, was much too young to get much from them - but liked his weird and unique worldview and his loop-de-loop sentences. I TRIED to read his two behemoths several times and never made much headway in either. A decade ago I read Inherent Vice to try to make sense out of Paul Thomas Anderson's film adaptation - and that pretty much brings me to now.

Since this is his first book in 12 years AND suspected to be his last (he'd be 100 if it took him as long to finish another) - I wanted to see what all the hoopla is about. Much of this seemed familiar - the strange names for all the characters, the long, convoluted sentences and difficult to follow plotline(s), the faux pastiche of Spillane/Cain/Chandler gumshoes and international shady syndicates.

I must confess that a lot of this I found rather jejune rather than intriguing, especially the character names, which I felt him straining too hard to make as bizarre as possible. I wish I had either read it on Kindle, where I could have relied on the search feature, or kept a detailed reckoning of the more than 50 characters, since I found it increasingly difficult to remember who everyone was, as it progressed.

Forget making any 'real' sense of the plot - I gave up and just enjoyed the elliptical and often amusing sentences - and some of the set pieces - which PTA should have a field day with, if he ever decides to make a third Pynchon film (as his current film, One Battle After Another, is loosely based on Vineland).
Profile Image for Greg Zimmerman.
983 reviews237 followers
September 15, 2025
Out Oct. 7.

Don't want to say too much about this yet pending my review for Chicago Review of Books, but suffice it to say, it's definitely, unmistakably a Pynchon
Profile Image for Ian "Marvin" Graye.
948 reviews2,783 followers
November 28, 2025
CRITIQUE:

"Action, Well, I Try to Avoid That Too, When I Can"
(Thomas Pynchon - p138)


As entertaining as Pynchon's most recent (and potentially last) novel is, it intentionally lacks significant narrative action.

Instead, it relies on atmosphere, character, description and dialogue, not to mention Pynchon's signature nomenclature (e.g., Hicks McTaggart, Boynt Crosstown, Thessalie Wayward, Skeet Wheeler, Stuffy Keegan, Hop Wingdale, Angie Voltaggio, Ooly Schaufel, T.P. O'Grizbee and Zoltan von Kiss).

"A Milwaukee Bildungsroman"

Although the novel is set in 1932, it's populated by German and Italian immigrants, Nazis, Fascists, Mafia family members, Jews, Klezmer players, millionaires, cheese makers, members of the International Cheese Syndicate, Ustashe operatives, gang members and private detectives.

The chief protagonist, Hicks McTaggart, is a private detective who is hired to find and return Daphne Airmont, the daughter of Bruno Airmont, "the Al Capone of Cheese".

Hicks is rumoured to have had an affair (Pynchon calls it "a history") with Daphne in the distant past, although she's now hanging around with Hop Wingdale, the clarinet player in a Jewish swing jazz band called the Klezmopolitans, who have recently embarked on a European tour.

The novel starts in Milwaukee (the cheese capital of Wisconsin) and Chicago (the mob controlled and heavily syndicated capital of Illinois) and finds its way by boat, train and submarine to pre-World War II Vienna, Budapest and Fiume (where the Italian Fascists assemble submarines out of parts manufactured further inland). All things lead to (a villa in) Fiume (and back):

"The villa dates from just after the War, when...Fiume had a reputation as a party town, fun-seekers converging from all over, whoopee of many persuasions, wide-open to nudists, vegetarians, coke-snorters, tricksters, pirates and runners of contraband, orgy-goers, fighters of after dark grenade duels, astounders of the bourgeoisie...

"For Daphne the villa is a place she would gladly have come 'home' to , even to live in."


description
(Fiume)

On Tour with the Klezmopolitans and Other "Astounders of the Bourgeoisie"

As often occurs in Pynchon's fiction, the characters travel from America to Europe (or the Middle East), and back to America (or vice versa).

Mid-western America is as ethnically and politically diverse as Central, Eastern and Southern Europe. The U.S.A. is the product (or a by-product) of Europe.

Pynchon's novel is equally a product of this intercontinental relationship that is both humorous and stimulating.

The United States of Paranoia

On a more serious note, the novel also suggests that the apparently home-grown fascism and paranoia of the contemporary United States originally crossed the Atlantic Ocean with the European immigrants.


SOUNDTRACK:
Profile Image for Tom Quinn.
654 reviews243 followers
October 15, 2025
Here it is, the definitive answer to "I'm new to Pynchon, where should I start?"

4 stars. Fast, funny, frequently witty and occasionally wise. Much more linear and much less dense than his other works (except Lot 49 which come to think is actually where you should start, probably)

A Statue of Liberty made of Jell-O. Where do you start eating it? The head? The torch? (75)
Profile Image for Lannie.
455 reviews11 followers
October 23, 2025
There's an episode of the show Scrubs (2001-2010) where someone thought "wouldn't it be neat to align all of the characters of our show with characters from The Wizard of Oz?" And they all agreed to do it. And it was neat.

Yep.

So, Shadow Ticket is like that, except it wonders how cool it would be if we dressed up the 1930s to look like today.

For example, instead of a man marrying his AI chatbot, we have a guy marry an automaton golem, the closest thing to a possible AI chatbot you would have in a fictional 1930s setting. Or how about this: instead of thousands of people watching mukbang videos (videos where people indulge in large quantities of food) on YouTube, they have theater films where a Shirley Temple analogue eats a bunch of delicious food while singing songs, one of which literally has the phrase "it's peanut butter and jelly time."

This is a trick of the Flintstones variety. In The Flinstones, all of the prehistoric garb is fictional aesthetic; the real story, the real humor, is about modern (at the time) America. When Cary Granite does a cameo, it's not informing you about a real celebrity from prehistoric times, it's just Cary Grant.

So when Shadow Ticket introduces the Vladboys, a motorcycle gang siding with upcoming fascism for the violence (as opposed to "legitimate" ideology), we're not meant to think there was actually a Vladboys group in the build-up to WWII. These are the Proud Boys. And this story is about right now.

Our main character, Hicks, lives in the USA, but is swept to Central Europe where Nazi fascism is creeping into the every day. He wants desperately to go home, back to the USA he grew up in with its idyllic peace and none of the fascism of 1930s Central Europe, but he can't. It's impossible. There is no going back, not yet. His journey in the literal is a sepia-tone mirror of the 2020s: Americans woke up in an unfamiliar country, metaphorically, that is growing into the same Nazi-style fascism seen in the 1930s. Some, like Hicks, want to go back to the America it was before, but can't. Other's, like the Vladboys (Proud Boys), revel in the chaos.

There is a lot to unpack here, such as Hicks' metaphorical complicity in all this (Hicks was a union buster, a practice Hitler and Mussolini would approve of in their fight against working class unions), or how the momentum of the plot is driven by the stalking of a submarine from the previous war. But also, it's a cartoonish romp, like most of what Pynchon writes. And that's what ultimately makes it fall flat.

My biggest problem with Pynchon has always been his prose. Sorry Pynchon Enjoyers, it's just not a flavor I enjoy, or understand, or can pay attention to well.

Pynchon novels read like someone transcribing the long-winded, affable mumblings of an older man reciting the plot of a Ralph Bakshi film he saw three months ago. It's written as if spoken, often choppy and witty, but without the necessary emphasis and timing you'd get from audio. I don't think it's a coincidence that Pynchon writes so many song lyrics in his books, but consider this: aren't they kind of hard to read if you don't know the melody? That's how all of Pynchon's stuff is; he assumes you know the melody when he rattles off the lyrics. He writes sentences as if you understand the look on his face, the arm gestures, the tone, the emphasis, but none of those are placed onto the page. You're left to infer the un-infer-able.

I've now read Pynchon at his latest, his earliest, and his in-between-est. I've read his be-hated Vineland and his controversially beloved Gravity's Rainbow. And I think I get it. It's maximal, it's convoluted, and it's also extremely clever and light-hearted. Sometimes it almost reaches beautiful. But it's just... it's just not the writing I find good, ya know?

Look at this sentence:


The magazine selection in the outer waiting area at Godwin Zipf includes Popular Litigation, Modern Psychopathy, and Steamy Detective, deep in whose cover story it’s not till Boynt reaches and shakes him does Hicks realize he’s been immersed for a while.


If I wrote this sentence, there isn't an editor in the world that would let it reach print. This is a testament to how much respect his style is allowed. But also, this sentence is a mangled mess, and it took me three times to fully understand it. Every novel is full of these: sentences that seem to have popped off the top of his dome in a rough draft note-taking session at the pub. This is not a sentence that respects its reader. It eschews clarity, but not in substitute for anything better. It's not funnier in this form, it's not more profound or vibe-o-rific. It's just messy.

Shadow Ticket might be the new "most accessible Pynchon," stealing the crown from The Crying of Lot 49. That's my opinion, at least. If you like a couple of muddled, cartoonish gags here and there, it's fun. Pynchon likes having fun. But at its deepest, the book is just a convoluted way of saying "fascism is coming" in a Sean Bean impression. It toys around with making quirky connections between fictional 1930s and today too much, and not enough time cementing that core idea, or even giving an idea of what to do or think about it. It's an homage to right now, but only in aesthetic.

It's like that Scrubs episode where someone thought "wouldn't it be neat to align all of the characters of our show with characters from The Wizard of Oz?" And they all agreed to do it. And it was neat.
Profile Image for Faisal.
93 reviews69 followers
Currently reading
April 10, 2025
SAVE MY LIFEEEE
Profile Image for Stetson.
557 reviews346 followers
November 25, 2025
In this review, I may be unfair to Pynchon as I’ve read little of his oeuvre, and much of my admiration comes secondhand, filtered through writers he influenced like David Foster Wallace. Even so, Shadow Ticket reads as an attempted resuscitation, a feeble one at that, of mid-century Pynchonism. It is the same anarchist posture, the same postmodern gambits that transmute thermodynamics into incoherent social theory, the same historical pastiche of jazz, gangsters, and 1930s fascism. That wouldn’t be a problem if the book treated those inheritances as living material for which stakes exist; instead, they are worn as costume in a playact of no consequence. The result is a novel that gestures constantly—at plot, at politics, at sympathy—without ever committing to the brass tacks that would make those gestures mean anything. Detective beats exist as atmosphere, not engines of motive; romance is staging, not attachment; satire is scattershot rather than targeted. Shadow Ticket feels nostalgic for Pynchon's own fading cleverness, and nostalgia here functions as an anesthetic for an inchoate pain.

What's the point of this? Was this a vanity project spurred on by McCarthy's The Passenger and Stella Maris? If Pynchon wants readers to care about the surface-level action of the novel, then why does he plot pre-textually? Has he not yet learned just how involuted his countercultural worldview has become?

I doubt he sees things this way given how One Battle After Another, an adaptation of Vineland, has been received. These things are corpses held up as art brimming with energy. Curiosities that will be consigned to a museum that just gathers dust while its biggest patrons pretend to visit.
Profile Image for Algernon.
1,839 reviews1,163 followers
November 6, 2025
A Statue of Liberty made of Jell-O. Where do you start eating it? The head? The torch?

It’s a new Thomas Pynchon adventure so, no matter where you start, you are guaranteed to become discombobulated , just like private detective Hicks McTaggart of Unamalgamated Ops detective agency in Milwaukee, the year 1932.
I’ve been around the block a couple of times already in a vehicle driven by Mr. Pynchon, so I knew that, once I have secured my seat belt, I was in for a wild ride of conspiracy theories, with a large cast of colourful and untrustworthy characters and a maximalist, truly immersive approach to world building. The world in this case being the next door neighbour to Al Capone’s Chicago, at least for the first part of the novel:

... there’s your wholesome Cream City, kid, mental hygiene paradise but underneath running off of a heartbeat crazy as hell, that’s if it had a heart which it don’t ...

Hicksie tries to keep a low profile and to stay out of trouble, but this is a difficult proposition when you’re built like an armoire and rolling bombs are launched at truck drivers like Stuffy Keegan, a local underworld figure. His boss at the agency has a proposition for McTaggart, a former strikebreaking gorilla better known for his fists than for his brains. According to the Gumshoe Manual, such a job is called a ticket:

“And the job would be ...”
“To locate Miss Airmont wherever she’s off to, smooth-talk her out of her involvement with this clarinet player, bring her back. Simple pickup and delivery.”


Daphne Airmont, the Milwaukee Cheese Heiress, has run away from home to follow clarinetist Hop Wingdale, a member of The Klezmopolitans, a popular swing band reformatted by electric xylorimba virtuoso Curly Capstock. Daphne left her fiancee G. Rodney Flaunch of the Glencoe Flaunches in tears over the million and a half dollars dowry that slipped through his fingers.
“Around Baraboo, even the sweetest of girls, the most carefully brought up you can imagine, could still, one day, all at once, just ... well, run away with the circus.”
Hicksie, who had a previous encounter slash one-night-stand with the missing hot tomato, seems like the right man for the job, despite his reluctance to handle affairs of the heart or to venture anywhere outside of his home town.

Private eyes of the 1930’s are emerging from an era of labor unrest and entering one of spousal infidelity, encouraged if not enabled by Prohibition

Clear so far? Don’t worry, things are about to get a lot more interesting in various explosive and/or subversive ways. You see, Miss Airmont is the daughter of the infamous Bruno Airmont, also known as the Al Capone of Cheese, which is pretty big in the milk saturated state of Wisconsin. Bruno is also missing, having absconded with a very large sum of money embezzled from the Cheese Syndicate. He is presumed to be hiding on a tropical island, surrounded by hula girls and sipping daiquiris. A lot of unpleasant personages are looking for Bruno – one more reason for Hicks to refuse the ticket.

This is about as far as I can get with trying to make sense of what happens next.
I made a list of the recurring characters, hoping it would help me navigate the detours our gumshoe is forced to take on his way to find the missing heiress. I ended up laughing out loud as I scratched my head at the inventiveness of the author while suspecting some of these names are based on real underworld characters from the period.
Zbig Dubinsky: a junior hire at the U-Ops agency, Skeet: a small though energetic urchin with a pocketful of rubber balloons and a supply of pins, Don Peppino Infernacci, Vito Guardalabene, Hoagie Hivnak, Giancarlo Foditto aka Dippy Chazz, Francesco “Finger of Death” Sfuzzino: locally year after year coming in at the top of everybody’s most-frightened-of list, Miss Fancy Vivid, Greasy Thumb Guzik, Ooly Schaufl, Vito Cubanelli, Dr. Swampscott Vobe, Pancho Caramba: percussionist, early influencer Glow Tripworth del Vasco and her alleged husband/ jealous boyfriend Porfirio del Vasto: high society thief and aircraft dealer, Royal Navy Commander Alf Quarrender, retired and his wife Philippa who are probably secret agents from MI7b or some service like that, Dr. Zoltan von Kiss: apportist, Zdenek, who claims to be an authentic Czechoslovakian golem, child movie star Squeezita Thickly, a spinthomaniac (don’t ask) named Phoebe, Egon Praediger: a cocaine addicted European commissar, Ace Lomax: bike dare-devil, Vassily Midoff: Russian contrabandist. There are literally hundreds more names to keep track of.

The novel comes with its own cabaret and vaudeville soundtrack, courtesy of the several femmes fatale that cross paths with Hicks, starting with his main squeeze and dance partner April Randazzo, a chanteuse who is also wooed by one of the ’Ndragheta capi, the seductive Glow, a fiery Hungarian biker named Terike, eventually Daphne if/when she comes out from the shadows. McTaggart may be a little slow in the brain department, but he is a real smooth operator on the dance floor, one could even say a professional at the Lindy-hop, the Mazize, the North Shore Zombie two-step(?) and other syncopated as sin rhythms of the original hipster era.
The ladies interest in Hicks comes with the complementary dirty looks from their husbands, parents or mobster sponsors. When a couple of elves bearing gifts accost our gumshoe on the street it is probably time for him to do his own vanishing act. Hicks would rather not go farther than a stone throw from his home town, but his boss, the newly arrived G-men in town and a spiked drink will make sure he wakes aboard the ocean liner Stupendica , bound for Europe and as clueless as the reader about what the heck is going on.

>>><<<>>><<<

So, Mr. Pynchon, where do you get your ideas from?
Apparently, he watches a lot of old Looney Tunes cartoons, because this is the main vibe I got from this novel:

A familiar mental prowl car now begins to drive back and forth across Hick’s brain, gonging high-low-high-low, signalling trouble for somebody, which Hicks would prefer to be anybody but him.

I can understand why it takes more than ten years for the author to publish something new: underneath the wacky actions and the burlesque actors lies a very solid foundation of research. The atmosphere feels authentic because one never knows for sure what is invented and what is actual trivia from 1932, what is relevant to the plot and what is just a detour. Most of all, the story is immersive for the intensive use of slang and of cultural references, in particular when we arrive in the Central Europe / Balkans part of the novel, at least for me as a native of the region.

Many are the rabbit holes waiting to trip the serious reader who wants to fact-check the author, and many are the rewards for those who can put aside the book in order to learn more about such things as the Maxfield Parrish nude pictures, an actress named Toby Wing, the Sombrero of Uneasiness, IMOPIO (Infernal Machines of Presumed Italian Origin), a hi-jacked Hungarian submarine from WWI currently hiding in Lake Michigan, Ojibwe spirit quests, pre-owned autogyros in tip-top condition barely flown, Sticky Toffee Pudding, Jack Rose cocktails the size of birdbaths, belinographs, 500 cmc Moto Guzzi racing motorcycles, contraband Ankhesenamun cigarettes, flying watermelons, theremin vacuum tubes, pareidolia, dedicated cruciverbalists, a lamp so stupefyingly tasteless it makes nonsense of the tasteless-lamp category itself, slivovitz effects on clarinet reeds, Blavatskian narkomats or the role of teuthologists in Valdivia Expedition of 1898-99.

Some of these are red herrings, some are actual clues to closing the Airmont ticket . So we’ll put on a zoot suit in midnight aubergine and electric kumquat , grab a big bowl of giant exploded kernels of corn fiery with eros paprika, drenched in goose grease, and try to solve the McTaggart ticket ourselves, as we move from Midnight in Milwaukee, with or without ukulele accompaniment, to mornings at the Crossword Suicide Cafe in Budapest, from Vlad the Impaler comedy skits around a Transylvanian campfire to a masked ball in Fiume/Rijeka (the Milwaukee of the Adriatic). It will go probably like this, and I’m quoting the novel for the next lines:

“Wait, now you’re talking about – vampires?”

“Talk to Lew Basnight. Get him to teach you the Curly Bill Spin. Something every gunslinger should know.”

“Egon. Wait. C’mon ... counterfeit cheese?”

“I say – Republicans and gangsters? How can such things be?”

“And while he was down there he bit my ankle. Rather like human existence, wouldn’t you say.”
“Y – well, no. Sure. Um – “
“Leave the deep thinking to others and get on with the action, that about cover it?”
“Action, well, I try to avoid that too, when I can.”
“Oh, dear.”
“Don’t worry, it doesn’t always avoid me.”


“Oh and this is Erzsebet, we’re eating her for Christmas.”

“Meanwhile, if I knew you were this cold I’d’ve asked you to keep a bottle of beer for me close to your heart.”

>>><<<>>><<<

Jumping catfish , give me a break, I will eventually get to the point, probably faster than Mr. Pynchon, with fewer detours and with less radioactive cheese (which is apparently the main source of the Bruno Airmont wealth and the reason InChSyn, the mad dog of Cheese Enforcement, are hunting him).

“Does cheese, considered as a living entity, also possess consciousness?”

As if the story wasn’t already convoluted enough, beyond the scope of the most bright cruciverbalist, some supernatural elements put in an appearance: sapient cheese, Zdenek the golem, various apportists, vampires, card sharps and mentalists like Thessaly, the U-Ops agency secretary(she knows all about men). Here’s another rabbit hole I need to escape from ... but not before two examples of the inclusion of real historical references in this crazy carnival ride, like :

... the recently famous Mrs. Myrtle Bennett of Kansas City, who in the course of an otherwise friendly bridge game shot her husband dead for coming up two tricks short on a contract.
(According to wikipedia, the famous Ely Culbertson wrote about the killing and trial in his new magazine, The Bridge World. In lectures, Culbertson suggested that if only the Bennetts had been playing the Culbertson System of bidding, then 36-year-old John Bennett might still have been alive.)

or, One of the many interesting facts about Milwaukee is that along with the Harley-Davidson motorcycle and the QWERTY typewriter keyboard layout, it’s also the birthplace of the shoe-store X-ray machine.

>>><<<>>><<<

I have so many more ideas I want to include in this review, like the importance of the Oriental Attitude TM in sleuthing, or the various tips to be gleaned from the Gumshoe Manual TM, some lessons in Romanian insults and folk tales, lyrics in cabaret singing or sketches about night owls, freeloaders, accidental walk-ins, practitioners of esoteric arts, fearers of the dark, compulsive socializers, secret police, jewel thieves, firefly girls, drug dealers, cigarette-factory workers, tobacco smugglers and all the other walk-in actors here.
You probably already deduced that I am a fan of this exuberant and twisted style of story construction, of the journey being often more interesting than the destination. But I also know there is always a backbone, a solid core to the whimsical and the subversive Pynchon narrative. It takes a lot of digging to get at the gold, but that is probably one of the keys to his enduring popularity.
Prohibition Era Milwaukee was not chosen at random: the ethnic mix of the population, the criminality, the political conspiracies, all that laughter, dancing, music, drugs and chaotic loving are projected against the background of the coming storm:

We’re in the last minutes of a break that will seem so wonderful and peaceable and carefree. If anybody’s around to remember. Still trying to keep on with it before it gets too dark. Until finally we turn to look back the way we came, and there’s that last light bulb, once so bright, now feebly flickering, about to burn out, and it’s well past time to be saying, Florsheims, let’s ambulate.

You might say I am reading contemporary things into the cheese magnate that are not there, but what else can I do when I come across such comments:

how insulting to me personally, to, to be mentioned in the same breath with this feeble impersonation of a crime boss? To waste my talent not on an evil genius but on an evil moron, dangerous not for his intellect, what there may be of it, but for the power that his ill-deserved wealth allows him to exert, which his admirers pretend is will, though it never amounts to more than the stuborness of a child ...”

The title mentions shadows and tickets. One interpretation is that all these people are dancing their way to apocalypse.

“Some of us, if conscience had toenails, would be hanging on by just that margin. Yet conscience must find ways to go on operating inside history.”

We are still operating today inside history, and the times they are a-changing!
As our Hicks McTaggart might exclaim in the final hour of his ticket:

Abyssinia, hepcats and hot tomatos! I’m truckin’ off to Timbuktu!
Profile Image for Jason Furman.
1,400 reviews1,624 followers
October 13, 2025
This is only my third Pynchon. I absolutely loved every sentence and frequently wanted to call everyone I knew to tell them about all the dozen or so zany things Thomas Pynchon dreams up on just about every page from the Al Capone of cheese to German submarines in the Great Lakes to a grand set of conspiracies linking gangsters, fascists, the law and more unravelling in Budapest.

I liked the picaresque, the 1930s vibes, the humorous pastiche of hard boiled detective novels, the linking of the Midwest and middle Europe.

But I somehow found myself yearning for some of what realistic novels have to offer. The characters were, well, real characters--at least the men and one dame. But they still don't feel like real people with real psychology telling you about anything (unless you think it is a commentary on the links between monopolies and criminality and fascism).

So ultimately it felt like a lot of fun. And really A LOT. I would read it again but first there are another five novels to read.
Profile Image for Kevin Adams.
476 reviews142 followers
November 17, 2025
“Light” Pynchon is still better than almost anything else in the world. Still the greatest living writer.
Profile Image for Jacob Brogan.
37 reviews17 followers
October 3, 2025
From my review in The Washington Post:

Sixty years ago, in his second novel, “The Crying of Lot 49,” Thomas Pynchon described a phenomenon that might double as an anticipatory description of his entire career. “Oedipa wondered whether, at the end of this,” he wrote of that novel’s protagonist, a woman unwittingly drawn into a mystery beyond her comprehension, “she too might not be left with only compiled memories of clues, announcements, intimations, but never the central truth itself, which must somehow each time be too bright for her memory to hold.”

All of Pynchon’s novels similarly seem poised to offer something revelatory — an explanation for where the American experiment went wrong, maybe — when what they really demonstrate is more like the concussive fireworks of a brain on the brink of a seizure. Pynchon is often misrepresented as a paranoid novelist of conspiracy theory, one who proposes to reveal the secret order of things. But that’s never been quite right: True paranoiacs imagine a single explanatory plot because they despair at the increasing complexity of the world. They find perverse comfort, perhaps even the promise of agency, in the idea of some malicious organizing force, on the grounds that if they’re out to get you, there must be a you for them to get. And if there’s a spider at the center of the web, at least we know that there must be a logic to the silken threads that entangle us.

Pynchon, by contrast, has never been all that interested in coherent plot, let alone in positing some definitive master plotter authoring it. If his work traffics in the conspiratorial, it does so by suggesting that all possibilities are true at once, even if they conflict with one another, which scrambles any impression of emergent order and thereby short-circuits the reassurance that conspiratorial fantasies offer.

The mafia, or something like it, exists in his new Prohibition-era novel, “Shadow Ticket,” but so do disquietingly genial Nazi policemen, scheming spymasters and, perhaps most important of all, the International Cheese Syndicate (InChSyn), an outfit at once menacingly omnipresent and bumbling. It’s true that InChSyn is sometimes pulling the strings, but most of them are made from low-moisture mozzarella.

As he always has been, the Pynchon of “Shadow Ticket” is most fascinated by the excess of information, the way that knowable things accumulate too fast for them to be transformed into mere knowledge. It is little wonder, then, that his most recent novels — “Inherent Vice” (2009), “Bleeding Edge” (2013) and now “Shadow Ticket” — have all centered on private detectives. As the wonderfully named Boynt Crosstown argues in “Shadow Ticket,” the PI doesn’t really set out to “solve” things in the way a mathematician does an equation or a police officer a crime. “This isn’t about bringing crooks to justice,” Boynt says. “We try any of that, licenses are sure to get pulled. What we do is, it’s only investigation. It’s like going to the movies. Sit quietly, eat popcorn, get educated.”

To read the rest of this review, go to: https://www.washingtonpost.com/books/...
Profile Image for Bonnie G..
1,819 reviews431 followers
November 10, 2025
I am still not sure what I just read, but my time in the world of the "overlords of cheese" was delightful, and funny, and slyly relevant. "Some of us, if consciences had toenails, would be hanging on by just that margin." Feel current to anyone?

This is Pynchon at his lightest, zaniest, funniest, and most frenetic. There are big bands in underground nightclubs, end runs around prohibition, and the rise of a populist leader who is destroying all the color and light and creating bogeymen (in this case, the Jews) to rally the faithful and let everyone know that no life is sacred unless Adolf thinks so. Regardless of the concerns of the Al Capone of Cheese, his daughter, and Hicks McTaggart, the private dick who has stumbled into being her savior, this book is about fiddling while Rome burns and finding yourself in the ruins. So yeah, it's relevant.

The book takes place in Milwaukee (which sounds like a place name Pynchon would have made up if it did not exist) until the action moves to the European theater via a slowboat Hicks finds himself aboard through no intention of his own. There are conmen, second-rate spies, klezmer musicians and more. I also learned that Budapest was the "Lourdes not of hope but of despair" where people flocked for a more "authentic" suicide. It is a rollicking adventure tale for sure, but so much more than that. I enjoyed the heck out of this. Did it have the heft of Gravity's Rainbow or Mason & Dixon? No. Was it smart, well-researched, hilarious, and oddly moving? Absofuckinglultely. An unambiguous 5-star for me.

I listened to this read marvelously by Edoardo Ballerini and read the Kindle for portions, and the audio is the way to go here. Ballerini is sublime.
Profile Image for Markus.
275 reviews94 followers
Read
December 5, 2025
Das war er also, der neue Pynchon. Anfangs bin ich auf der Leitung gesessen und dachte schon, das ist Käse. Bis ich es geschnallt habe. Privatschnüffler Hicks McTaggart aus Milwaukee stolpert aus einem einfachen Vermisstenfall in eine Welt, in der lokale Mafiosi, das ominöse "Internationale Käse Syndikat", Nazi-Sympathisanten in Bowling-Clubs, britische Spione, Motorradfreaks, Spiritisten und Jazz aufeinandertreffen. Wie üblich ist nie das drin, was draufsteht, und keiner ist der, für den man ihn hält. Der klassische Detektivroman entpuppt sich als Farce, als Satire und Groteske.

1930er Jahre, Wirtschaftskrise, Prohibition, Kleinkriminalität und globaler Faschismus, dunkle Mächte ziehen die Strippen und dazwischen Schlager mit infantilen Texten, Versatzstücke aus Popkultur, Wortspiele, flache Witze und Slapstick als Mittel, das Absurde und Abgründige sichtbar zu machen. Es gibts zwar sowas wie eine Handlung, allerdings ist sie ziemlich sinnlos. Es ist mehr eine Abfolge von Bildern und Szenen, die aus einschlägigen Filmen geschnitten sein könnten - typische Klischees, irgendein Held steckt endgültig in Schwiergkeiten, und wenn du glaubst, es geht nichts mehr, kommt irgendwo ein Zeppelin her und lässt dir ein Seil herunter …

Die narrative Entropie entspricht der Geschichte der 1930er Jahre — und noch mehr der Gegenwart: Eine immer mehr um sich greifende Auflösung aller bisher für verlässlich gehaltenen Strukturen führt von der schlichten Paranoia des Einzelnen zu einem kollektiven Gefühl der Realitätserosion. Was 1932 noch obskure Untergrundaktivität war, wird heute vom Internet durch die schiere Masse an Desinformation an die Oberfläche gespült. Bald hebt KI die Grenze zwischen Realität und Fake ganz auf und lässt alles in beliebigem Slop verschwimmen.

Gefallen hat er mir schon, der neue Pynchon, der Witz, die Seitenhiebe und vor allem die unzähligen enzyklopädischen Bezüge und Skurrilitäten. Unterhaltsamer anspruchsvoller Klamauk, aber nicht mehr. Die große Begeisterung ist diesmal leider ausgeblieben. Kann sein, dass die verrückte Welt des Thomas Pynchon seit 9/11 und Covid von der Wirklichkeit eingeholt wurde. (Dronald Tump könnte ja aus einem seiner Romane entlaufen sein.)

BTW: apropos Entropie. Goodreads scheint sich auch aufzulösen. Zuerst kann ich die review gar nicht speichern, später bessere ich einen Fehler aus, trotz Speichern ist der Fehler immer noch da usw. usf. ...
Profile Image for cycads and ferns.
817 reviews95 followers
October 16, 2025
Private detective, and previous strike breaker, Hicks McTaggart had an understanding with his boss, Boynt Crosstown; he would not be required to do out-of-town tickets. Then came the news of a missing Wisconsin Cheese Heiress, Daphne Airmont, a past acquaintance. Followed by the rumors of Stuffy Keegan’s accident and disappearance. On a submarine? Then there was the meeting with the Feds, where they said you help us, we help you. Suspicious of Hicks’ activities, the subsequent threat to his life was obvious to all. And all along he was wondering, what’s up with his girl April. Betraying him? To Don Peppino? Hicks thought he still had options; wrong , he found himself with a one way ticket to New York. Now his no out-of-town ticket stipulation was out the window.
In NY, Hicks discovers that Daphne Airmont and Hop Wingdale, a jazz clarinetist, accompanied the swing band, the Klezmopolitans, overseas. He finds waiting for him a fat envelope, a steamer ticket and a new passport. A drink later and Hicks mysteriously wakes up on a transatlantic liner on his way to Hungary. And here his one out-of-town ticket quickly begins to multiply.
Profile Image for michal k-c.
894 reviews120 followers
October 13, 2025
As far as Pynchon goes this is pretty slight, only really gestures towards what he has in past works been able to articulate and excise. Not to say this isn't worth reading or that it can't deliver on one of the more precious dimensions of reading (pleasure, of course). It got a few chuckles out of me, and two real laughs re: the possible role of cheese in a coup in the final pages and the image of three men sitting on the same overly long motorcycle. A lot of the big reviews of this have essentially debated whether or not this novel "says anything" about our times (a totally nebulous sort of reading, since historicization is only really possible for a period where history doesn't yet exist); of course it does, and it also doesn't, like most novels worth reading. The style is what stands out to me; Pynchon's encyclopedic poetics turned to low-art pulp fodder occasionally produces some wonderful rhythmic fodder. But that's about where it ends for me; the plot is meandering but focused just enough to hold attention, the characterization all thin and cartoonish like a pulp often is, etc. But I will say that these are perhaps some wise words Pynchon (nearly) leaves us with for our times: "We're in the last minutes of a break that will seem so wonderful and peaceable and carefree." If this novel set in the early phases of legitimized European Nazism has a lot to say about our times, well, that doesn't really portend very well does it
Profile Image for Joséphine.
211 reviews16 followers
Want to read
September 21, 2025
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Christmas comes early this year

Edit: and Edoardo Ballerini narrates the audiobook! I'm in heaven.
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