Mason and Dixon

773 pages

Langue : English

Publié 29 juin 1998

ISBN :
978-0-09-977191-3
ISBN copié !

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5 étoiles (1 critique)

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. Here is their story as re-imagined by Thomas Pynchon, in an updated eighteenth-century novel featuring Native Americans and frontier folk, ripped bodices, naval warfare, conspiracies erotic and political and major caffeine abuse.

We follow the mismatch'd pair - one rollicking, the other depressive; one Gothic, the other pre-Romantic - from their first journey together to the Cape of Good Hope, to pre-Revoluntionary America and back, through the stange yet redemptive turns of fortune in their later lives, on a grand tour of the Enlightenment's dark hemisphere, as they observe and participate in the many opportunities for insanity presented them by the Age of Reason.

5 éditions

incredibly good

5 étoiles

This was probably one of the hardest and best books I've ever read. A deliberately ahistorical historical novel, it tells the story of two men, one an astronomer, the other a surveyor, about whom very little is actually known, in the form of a picaresque tale that tells a story within a story, with some digressions into even deeper layers of narrative. All sorts of absurd episodes about talking dogs, flying magicians and the hollow earth are interwoven. Nevertheless, you learn a lot about history, including historiography and how much you can trust it, but also about colonial America, slavery, astronomy, seafaring and much more, and of course about the surveying of the Mason-Dixon line, which was an engineering achievement at the time and is still regarded as the dividing line between the northern and southern states of the United States. The novel is at times terribly funny and at …