It was noon in Queens, 1983, summertime, a temperate, and fresh day that was full of Potential.
Henry was 5 pages into a new story, typing it on his electric typewriter, placing the finished pages on his desk next to the typewriter, not far from a tumbler of whiskey and soda. He exuberantly rips a completed page out of his typewriter, his arm swings to one side, connects with the tumbler, knocking it over and spilling whiskey on the finished pages.
A thought flashes through his mind,
Tom Wolfe the pedant never spilled whiskey on a manuscript, but Bukowski the wild man surely spilled beer on pages of finished poetry.
He places a small bedside table at a right angle to his desk and puts a paper filing cabinet on top of the bedside table, the cabinet a safe place for finished pages.
Lucia, Henry’s Cuban wife of 5 months, walks into the room and stands over him, saying,
mi amor, I’m going to my girlfriend's salon, Valentina's to get my pussy waxed and pick up an ounce of marijuana, it’s killer, Purple Ripper, back in a few. His mind is on work and he says without looking up,
OK, sweets, love ya!
Thomas Pynchon earned a B.A. in English from Cornell University in 1958, then spending a year in Greenwich village living like a Bohemian, and writing short stories. In 1960 he moved to Seattle and was hired as a technical writer for Boeing where he worked for 2 years, then leaving the company to write full time.
In 1963 his first novel V was published, a cynical tale about a Zelig-like female character who time travels and shows up at crucial times of European history. The novel won the Faulkner Foundation Award which would be the first of many awards for Pynchon. When Pynchon 3rd novel, Gravity’s Rainbow was published in 1973 it won critical acclaim, at this point adored by American literati.
Pynchon’s heavy use of metaphor is meant to seduce his readers to use imagination rather than reason. Basic themes such as— system vs freedom, reality vs illusion, life vs death, are paired opposites that interact and work as engines that power his work.
Years later in 2014, his book Inherent Vice became a Hollywood film, which won an Oscar for Best Screenplay, another accolade for Pynchon.
Thomas Pynchon is a world-famous recluse, who makes JD Salinger look like Mohamed Ali or Jack Sparrow. Pynchon hasn’t appeared before the media since 1963 and he reigns supreme among reclusive novelists. When Gravity’s Rainbow won the National Book Award, another trophy, Pynchon, as you would guess sent someone else to accept the award on his behalf.
After reading 20 pages of Pynchon’s book V, Henry places the book into a metal trash can near his desk, carries the trash can to his apartment terrace, sets it down, pours Zippo lighter fluid into the trash can on the book, lights the book, and watches it burn and diminish into a small grey mound of organic ash matter.
Burning V was more fun than reading it.
Most likely, Thomas the-escape-artist Pynchon is hiding away in upstate New York, in Steuben County maybe, sitting on a lone stool in front of his basement bar drinking and staring at his collection of awards, carefully hung on the wall.
As Henry puts the finishing touches on the Pynchon bit Lucia, who doesn’t own underwear, walks into the living room and lifts her skirt up overhead, her pubic hair is finely trimmed and shaped like a candy cane, laughing she says,
come lick my candy cane baby.
he makes up a dumb limerick,
I know a girl who's tough but sweet
She's so fine, she can't be beat
She's got everything that I desire
Sets the summer sun on fire
I want candy
I want candy
I want candy
I want candy
I know a girl who's tough but sweet
She's so fine, she can't be beat
She's got everything that I desire
Sets the summer sun on fire
I want candy
I want candy
I want candy
I want candy
The couple are fun-loving bohemians who live in the moment, sucking up everything the it offers.
By sundown having knocked down more than 3 pitchers of bloody marys they clean up and dress for a trip to the City. Lucia puts on short shorts and a red tank top with black lettering that reads,
I HAVE TALENTS
YOU CAN’T
PUT ON
RESUMES
Henry wears khaki shorts and a Met’s t-shirt.
It was the kind summer night that pulled at folks who were sitting at home in easy chairs, filling them with the feeling that something was going on out there— as though the gods had seeded the clouds with aphrodisiacal sex goo that dripped invisible droplets on the city.
Henry and Lucia leave the apartment, walking to Forrest Avenue Station in Queens, boarding a subway train, riding it to 42nd Street, Times Square. They walk up the steps to street level, it was Lucias first trip to Times Square, bowled over she says,
bebe, santa meirda, colored lights everywhere, even the police station has a neon sign.
They walk a few blocks to a Cubano sandwich shop called Marcon and stand outside looking in, she says,
I have eaten comida Cubana all my life, let’s eat American! And, he says,
American food? America has been blitzed with ethnic food from every corner of the globe, KFC and Mc Donalds are the new American food, honestly doll, I have never eaten it. She says excitedly,
We don’t have Mc Donalds in Cuba, take me to Mc Donalds bebe!
He hated Mc Donalds, but he wanted her to experience it. Walking a short distance they find a Mc Donalds, gliding on air through the golden arches and going inside the fast-food paradise. After queuing at the counter a few minutes he tells Lucia,
baby, let the lady know what you want, with a child-like look on her face she orders,
a Big Mac, french fries, a Coca-Cola and an Apple Pie!
Henry vibing on her enthusiasm orders,
OK, a vanilla shake, cheery pie and a cup of coffee.
Stepping back from the counter, waiting a few minutes until their order comes, Lucia
grabs the tray and says,
My God bebe, how did they make the little pie so fast?
Lucia holds the tray in both hands, walking proudly, feeling American as if she was anointed by George Washington himself.
Sitting in their booth, which was constructed with a mysterious material, a corporate secret, like, what kind of fried-deep-water-cold-blooded-vertebrae animal is on a Mc Fish Sandwich or how the french fries are made? Lucia asks,
how much was it? He answers,
4 dollars 95 cents, she says
Dios mio, for all this? I can’t believe it!
As she unwraps her Big Mac, holding it in both hands, looking at it, silence prevails as though the gods were watching from the clouds, she takes a bite and chews it slowly, saying,
I love it darling, it’s marvellosa!
Then, he sips his shake and takes a bite out of the fried rectangular cherry pie and thinks, hmm, not bad.
For most, it would merely be another meal at Mc Donalds, but for Lucia, it was a welcome to America fete.
The couple walks a few blocks to the New Amsterdam Theater, running into Henry’s pal the Times Square Cowboy, who is standing near the ticket counter— shucking, jiving and scratching like Ray Charles. The cowboy’s a gay pimp and junky who hustles dope in front of the theater and reviews films for people who score, warning his buyers if the film is bad. Films like Sex in the City or Baby Boom are sure bets to get the Cowboy’s thumbs down, over the years he has become known as the street, Roger Ebert.
Anyway, the cowboy says,
Henry baby where ya been? Howz tricks? Who's da hot piece of ass? I have ah, Peruvian cocaine, chocolate mescaline and a dime bag of joints, killer stuff. Da film is Scarface, it’s tits baby, wild, wild stuff, thumbs up!
Henry buys a dime bag of pre-rolled joints from the cowboy and tickets at the counter, walking inside, sitting in the back row. Lucia raises her eyebrows and holds her nose saying,
bebe, it smells like mildew here, and he says,
yeah, after the midnight show the theater runs an all night porn marathon.
They sit in the back row and light a joint, after the previews, the feature film Scarface comes on the screen—the opening scene is a panned shot of ragged banana boats full of Mariellotos intercepted by the Coast Guard outside the docks of Miami, Lucia who is angry says,
Fidel the puta put the scumbags on boats to Miami to poison America, the Mariellitos gang bangers are germs, I can’t watch this shit, vamonos!
Leaving the New Amsterdam Theater and Times Square they walk through the high-rise canyons of the city reaching the dark and eerie Meatpacking District. On 10th Avenue they walk north reaching Ground Zero Museum and then east towards the Hudson River on a deserted street, Henry sees a neon sign up the block that reads,
Hi Hat Club
It’s a burlesque joint, he pays 20 bucks at the door, they go inside, sitting at a small table and order shots of tequila. The Hi Hat Club is the last of the old time burlesque venues in the Big Apple, Lenny Bruce got his start doing schtick between acts and his wife Honey stripped there.
As the couple drinks tequila, the house band, 3 black dudes from Harlem, a sax player, drummer, and bassist play sleazy sax music, eyes shut, nodding, junked up in front of a red velvet curtain that drapes the stage.
Lucia who has a nose like a Bluetick Coon Hound says,
baby, it smells like cum in here, and Henry says,
it’s mildew, the old velvet curtains are sweating dry rot.
As the drummer taps out a rim shot— rat-a-tat-tat, and the sax player blows high sleaze, Pussy Wilderness comes on stage. She is wearing a bear suit that comes apart at the seams, slowly stripping it off to the music. Then, in a g-string Pussy Wilderness moves sexy-like to the couple's table, with her back against Henry she gyrates back and forth rubbing her ass on his face, Lucia laughs and he puts his nose into the stripper's ass saying in a slightly muffled tone,
her hole smells like dime store douche.
As Pussy Wilderness collects the pieces of her bear suit and exits stage left, an Asian stripper billed as Shanghai Sal comes on stage. Her hair is Betty Page style, she is wearing an embroidered kimono which she slowly lifts, then taking it off showing her slender white skinned body. Shanghai Sal then moves cobra-like through the audience as the band is doing their best to play a weak version of Duke Ellington’s Chinoiserie. Lucia enjoying the show asking,
darling, does she turn you on? And he says,
babe, it's the Hi Hat Club, it's on a planet of its own, it’s a circus, the last of Vaudeville, just being here turns me on.