p. 247 "7242" 16mm Ektachrome EF
reversal film, a medium fast (125 ASA) workhorse stock.
p. 248 "...a handful of persons [were] unaccounted for. In those days it was unthinkable that any
North American agency would kill its own civilians and then lie about it.... Vond referred to it
humorously as 'rapture.'" Rapture is a Biblical reference to the Day of Judgment, when the dead and the
living will be taken to Heaven. Vond uses the term again, later, to describe winching Prairie up "into the sky"
and abducting her (p. 376). Pynchon may have picked up the term from Job, Robert Heinlein's last great fantasy
novel.
p. 248 "Fawning, gazing upward at the zipper of his fly, media toadies..." Here we see the "official"
media, directed by the government, rewriting the Sixties on the spot. The only reporter to challenge Vond is
dragged away.
p. 248 "field-gray trucks" Feldgrau, that popular old Wehrmacht color!
p. 249 "tenebrous cool light" tenebrous = dark, gloomy.
p. 249 "Federal Emergency Evacuation Route (FEER)" What a quintessentially Pynchonian idea, and
what a powerful image, and what a great acronym!
p. 250 "ruins from Camelot" Little left from the Kennedy presidency.
p. 250 "the flagship of the 24fps motor pool, a '57 Chevy Nomad" Cool wheels, but not mentioned in
the semi-extensive description of the 24fps vehicle collection on p. 194.
p. 251 "Virgil Ploce" Great name. And count on Pynchon to choose an anti-communist with an
exploding cigar! Rumors about this supposedly-CIA-backed anti-Castro plot emerged after the Bay of Pigs
invasion. It's never been established whether the gambit was actually put into practice.
p. 252 "primer cord" Pynchon makes a common error in this reference; he may only have heard it said,
never seen it in writing. This stuff is actually called "Primacord" (a copyrighted name of the Ensign-Bickford
company). It's useful stuff, serving not only as a primer, but as a conveniently cord-shaped explosive substance.
p. 252 "the sudden light from behind, the unbearable sight in the mirror" An atomic explosion.
p. 253 "...becoming its harsh woven shadow..." Frenesi = light; DL = shadow; together = film. Also, of
course, ones and zeros.
p. 254 "Hasta la proxima, querida mia" Spanish for "Until next time, my dear." The letter "Z" is, of
course, the trademark of Zorro. This steamy scene seems virtually pointless; maybe Pynchon got horny while he
was writing. "Perhaps...not unscented" indeed! (See also p. 118, with the smell of DL's "pussy excitation.")
p. 255 "the subroutine Yukai na...a low-order limbic pleasure cycle that would loop over and over"
Interesting use of computer programming lingo in the martial arts world.
p. 258 "A llover" What a great meal!
A llover is Spanish for, "It's about to rain," but it also refers to the
fact that it's "all over" for the outdoor desayuno. Pynchon puns again.
p. 259 "powder to the people" Ouch!
p. 259 "Feel like we were running around like little kids with toy weapons, like the camera really was
some kind of gun, gave us that kind of power. Shit. How could we lose track like that, about what was
real?" Frenesi has totally bought Vond's line about the powerlessness of film vs. a gun. (And that's how they
got her. And us.)
p. 259 "who'd we save" Yet another preterite reference, and one that harks back to Hector's speech on p.
28.
p. 259 "Purple Owsley" Another run of Owsley's high-grade color-coded LSD.
p. 260 "You know what happens when my pussy's runnin' the show." If this is Frenesi's only
motivation for the series of betrayals (including her betrayal of herself) that lie at the heart of Vineland, it's a
thin reed on which to build a book. Unless we buy into Sister Rochelle's Eden parable in which Vond represents
the snaky seductiveness of authority, and Frenesi stands for a postwar America that's eager to surrender its
freedom. Indeed, Frenesi's enjoyment of bondage and discipline games, which free her of responsibility, makes
a strong connection with all the S&M sequences in the book (see next note).
p. 260-261 "behind the Thorazine curtain" Pynchon on a sadism kick. He does seem to have a
weakness for this stuff, as many sequences in Gravity's Rainbow will attest.
p. 261 "1,000-watt Mickey-Mole spot" An open face (lensless) focusing studio light from the Mole-
Richardson company. It rhymes, too.
p. 263 "out in the zodiac..." Vond is a Scorpio. What else?
p. 263 "idiolalia" Pynchon loves these esoteric terms. It means a private language. Here starts the
paranoia about 24fps'rs disappearing -- which echoes people disappearing from the computer (p. 85), and the
Kahuna airplane (p. 65).
p. 265 "Why would he come after us?" Good question.
p. 265 "The whole Reagan program..." Yeah! Go, Pynchon, go!
p. 266 Vond is "after Frenesi...to use her for some task." OK, what task?
p. 266-267 "So the big bad Ninjamobile swept along on the great Ventura [Freeway]...above the heads
of TV watchers, lovers under the overpasses, movies at malls letting out, bright gas-station oases in pure
fluorescent spill...down the corridors of the surface streets, in nocturnal smog, the adobe air, the smell of
distant fireworks, the spilled, the broken world." What a great paragraph! Yes, the cat can write -- rhyming
verse and all: "flirters, deserters, wimps and pimps"
CHAPTER 13
Here, thank God, we have a short, simple chapter. Starts in 1970, just after the events at CotS; Frenesi is still
in the concentration camp, called PREP (Political Reeducation Program). [Presumably this is before DL breaks
her out, but one gets the impression in the previous chapter that the break-out followed quite swiftly upon the
CotS events, so go figure.] Brock stops in with his sidekick Roscoe and flirts with Frenesi. Vond is into Cesare
Lombroso, a turn-of-the-century phrenologist. Lombroso's notion of "misoneism," a kind of negative feedback
loop by which society resists change, is introduced too. Brock taunts Frenesi sadistically, and splits.
There's a flashback about Vond: His sexuality. His attractiveness for women. His fear of sex.
When Frenesi escapes, Vond is deeply distraught. It appears he really loves her. His colleagues begin to
suspect that he's falling apart, so he has to lay low and not look for Frenesi. Instead he fucks other hippie girls.
Meanwhile, Frenesi has met and married Zoyd, and gotten pregnant. We get the impression that for Frenesi,
the main benefit of her relationship with Zoyd is that it offers cover; love does not seem to be a significant
feature. Zoyd and the Corvairs get a record contract, but cut no record. Frenesi moves back in with Sasha to
have her baby. Afterwards, Frenesi becomes deeply depressed, and even more fixated on Vond. Her father
Hubbell shows up too, and in the guise of comforting her tells her (and us) his sad story: A gaffer (and
progressive left-wing type), he refused to scab at the movie studio by joining IATSE, choosing instead to join
the Conference of Studio Unions. Of course he loses his job. In a nested flashback we visit Hubbell and Sasha
as young WWII beboppers. Flashforward to Hubbell giving in and reluctantly joining IA--and retiring as
quickly as possible. Flashforward again to Frenesi and the baby Prairie. Gradually Frenesi loses her hatred of
Prairie, and tries to forget both Vond and 24fps. But when Vond reappears, their steamy S&M love affair
resumes.
p. 268 "...his partner Roscoe..." Roscoe = slang for pistol.
p. 269 "children longing for discipline" Vond's genius lies in seeing this desire in the kids of the Sixties.
Is this Pynchon's view? It certainly seems true of Frenesi.
p. 270 "Jeez I know I'm bad but--" Reference to the Shangri-Las' old rock 'n' roll song "Leader of the
Pack." The full line goes, "He's bad, but he's not evil."
p. 271 "less voluble Tonto" Brock and Roscoe as Lone Ranger and Tonto.
p. 271 "Feel like we've been in a Movie of the Week!" L-like
The Brock Vond Story, starring Robert
Redford?
p. 272 "Cesare Lombroso" Detailed exposition of the Italian criminologist's theories show Brock's (or,
more precisely, Pynchon's) fascination with them. "...crude in method and long superseded, although it seemed
reasonable to Brock." Or any other fascist with a bent toward genocide. Most of this stuff probably comes from
the 1911 translation of Lombroso's Criminal Man, or the 1911 biography by H.G. Kurella.
p. 274-5 "the Madwoman in the Attic" Brock's female side. This is the name of a major concept in post-
Freudian feminist psychology. (Also the title of the Gilbert/Gubar book of feminist criticism concerning 19th
Century novels.) Vond's dream foreshadows other criminal/erotic dream-women (such as Frenesi) coming in
"from steep overhead angles" (p. 276). They sound like harpies or vampires, coming to rape Vond. As we shall