"She looked down a slope, needing to squint for the sunlight, onto a vast sprawl of houses which had grown up all together, like a well-tended crop, from the dull brown earth; and she thought of the time she’d opened a transistor radio to replace a battery and seen her first printed circuit. The ordered swirl of houses and streets, from this high angle, sprang at her now with the same unexpected, astonishing clarity as the circuit card had. Though she knew even less about radios than about Southern Californians, there were to both outward patterns a hieroglyphic sense of concealed meaning, of an intent to communicate. There’d seemed no limit to what the printed circuit could have told her (if she had tried to find out); so in her first minute of San Narciso, a revelation also trembled just past the threshold of her understanding."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Novelists from the United StatesPeople from New York (state)Essayists from the United StatesHistorical novelistsCatholics from the United States
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Chapter 1
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Thomas_Pynchon
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Thomas Pynchon
101 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Thomas Pynchon →
Related Quotes
"They are in love. Fuck the war."
"Write by WASTE. The government will open it if you use the other. The dolphins will be mad. Love the dolphins."
"This is America, you live in it, you let it happen. Let it unfurl."
"The illustrations were woodcuts, executed with that crude haste to see the finished product that marks the amateur. T…"
"Death glided by, shadowless, among the empties on the grass."
"Dream tonight of peacock tails, / Diamond fields and spouter whales. / Ills are many, blessings few, / But dreams ton…"
"When Marilyn Monroe got out of the game, I wrote something like, "Southern California's special horror notwithstandin…"
"Why should things be easy to understand?"
"Let me be unambiguous. I prefer not to be photographed."
"What, a Re-Peat!"