Thomas Pynchon returns at age 88 with madcap mystery 'Shadow Ticket'

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By News Room 8 Min Read

“Spend your whole day around ice cream, you can begin to grow philosophical,” warns an informant in “Shadow Ticket,” Thomas Pynchon’s madcap take on the hard-boiled detective novel. We’re in Cream City (Milwaukee), where dairy is not only big business, but also the basis for activities criminal, geopolitical and spiritual. The year is 1932. The Depression has hit, Prohibition is in full swing, and fascism is on the rise.

The 1930s backdrop makes “Shadow Ticket” a surprisingly timely intervention by the reclusive, recondite giant of American literature. If any decade has come to be treated as a touchstone for our troubled present, it’s the darkening tunnel of the ’30s. And considering the current renaissance of conspiratorial thinking — the Epstein files, QAnon — the time is ripe for a new novel by an author for whom paranoia is the default mode of existence.

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