Thomas Pynchon's Mason & Dixon (1997)

Mason & Dixon

America's Own Line: Surveying "Mason & Dixon"

David Kipen

Thomas Pynchon can't even write a linear novel about the Mason-Dixon Line. His first novel, "V." (1963), was shaped like the 22nd letter of the modern English alphabet, with two parallel narratives half a century apart converging, Euclid be damned, in a waterspout off Malta in 1919. "The Crying of Lot 49" (1966) suggested more of an asterisk, a short, six chaptered starburst of invention that mocked the footnotes with which academia was already beginning to festoon Pynchon's fiction. "Gravity's Rainbow" (1973), routinely called the best American novel of everything from the decade (per the stingy) to the century, left its key by the door, disclosing its structure right in the title. It's a rainbow, a parabola, the same one traveled by the V-2 rocket launched in its first chapter, and by the doomsday missile about to strike Los Angeles in its last. "Vineland" (1990) assumed just about the oldest shape in fiction: a love triangle, in this case hanging off a chuckwagon at breakfast and beaten loudly, so as to rouse America--Pynchon's perennial subject, more explicitly with each succeeding book--from its nodding, post-1960s doze. A "V," an asterisk, a parabola, a triangle--not a straight line in the bunch. Punchlines, not straight ones, have always been Pynchon's stock in trade. His newest book, "Mason & Dixon" (a masterpiece, by the way) is desperately serious, yet even the very best comic novels are as dirges next to it.

"Mason & Dixon" reconstructs the story of the two Englishmen--the former a melancholy professional astronomer lost in the stars, his partner an earthbound surveyor--contracted to run a boundary westward between the colonies of Pennsylvania and Maryland in the 1760s. This was harder than it sounds, as the monarchy had generously granted some of the same land to both the Calverts of Maryland and Pennsylvania's Penns. Mason and Dixon succeeded where several others had failed, but their success became America's tragedy, prefiguring the divisiveness of a civil war that Appomattox only interrupted.

The novel falls into three sections. The first, "Latitudes and Departures,"
tells of Mason and Dixon's first meeting and slow friendship on a royal expedition to the southern hemisphere in 1761. There they observe and record the "transit of Venus," a kind of eclipse in which that planet passes in front of the sun. When compared with other such observations taken around the world, their calculations help to measure the earth's distance from the sun, demystifying the heavens and ushering in the Age of Reason.

The third section, "Last Transit," chronicles their final wanderings, separately and together, as they confront not just a second transit of Venus in 1769, but their own transits from this life into the doubtful next.

In between stands the middle passage, by far the longest and called, with linear directness, "America." In other words, "Mason & Dixon" resembles less a straight line than a luncheon snack, as a minor character divines immediately: "When (Mason and Dixon) come to explain about the two Transits of Venus, and the American Work filling the Years between, 'By heavens, a "Sandwich,"' cries Mr. Edgewise." The Earl himself doesn't appear in this sandwich-shaped novel, but just about all his 18th-century contemporaries in the not-just-English-speaking world do, including then-Colonel George Washington; a sinister, Promethean Ben Franklin; and "a tall red-headed youth" never directly identified as Thomas Jefferson. Dr. Samuel Johnson and his youthful ward James Boswell put in an appearance late in the proceedings as well, and even a squinty mariner with a weakness for spinach rates a cameo.

The list, like the novel, does go on. Limitations of space, memory and erudition all forbid an exhaustive catalog of the book's contents. More than any line or sandwich, "Mason & Dixon" resembles the wondrous carriage by which our heroes travel in one episode: "Our Coach is a late invention of the Jesuits, being, to speak bluntly, a Conveyance, wherein the inside is quite noticeably larger than the outside, though the fact cannot be appreciated until one is inside."

This proto-holodeck is a favorite image with Pynchon, who returns to it not 50 pages later to describe a remote cabin where they "find more room inside than could possibly be contained in the sorrowing ruin they believ'd they were entering." Unlike the coach and the cabin, the 773-page "Mason & Dixon" looks plenty big even on the outside. But to house the bottomless wealth of ideas hatching inside, an entire library would appear impossibly small. One of Pynchon's best ideas may have been his first one. "Mason & Dixon's" achievement begins with Pynchon's discovery of an historical subject commensurate not only with his twin obsessions -- America and science -- but with his anger at the mess that greed has made of them both.

Pynchon's work, ironically for someone so long misfiled under science- fiction, has always focused on his excavation of the past. Perhaps the whole point of writing a historical novel such as "Mason & Dixon" is to find some overlooked turning point behind us. At the height of the Age of Reason, which bequeathed us not only a country but the wisdom it took to ruin it, Pynchon finds the setting of his dreams. The period also affords him endless opportunities for language play -- not exactly Pynchon's weak suit to begin with. Ever the ventriloquist, Pynchon throws his voice a distance of two centuries, and it comes whizzing back like a boomerang with the strangest English on it you've ever heard. Teenage girls say "I'm, as, 'maz'd," when of course what they mean is "I'm, like, wow." "Cheap shot," Mason tries to say when Dixon insults his attire, only it comes out "Inexpensive salvo." Goofy? You bet. Pynchon's got the stately 18th century diction down cold, but he splices it together with his own idiosyncratic style to produce a hybrid that moves at the very speed of thought.

More effort's been expended over the years in praising Pynchon's prose than in actually describing it, and that's unfortunate. Most reviews of his work concentrate on its surrealistic aspects -- the "hallucinatory, pyrotechnic, phantasmagorical" school of adjective-stuffed, blurb-ready criticism. Commas are very big with these people. More and more, though, the defining quality of Pynchon's voice strikes me as, of all things, understatement. Listen to him early on, detailing the way certain dockside denizens of Philadelpia "have pass'd the Morning perfecting before pocket mirrors images of guilelessness." Without ever coming out and calling them pickpockets -- though the specification of "pocket" mirrors sneaks in a subliminal hint -- Pynchon almost casually nails the scene.

Time and again these signature circumlocutions yield long sentences that fairly beg to be read aloud. But that would spoil the visual pleasure of seeing all the trappings of a vanished English resurrected, like Mason and Dixon themselves, from undeserved obscurity: the capitalized Nouns; the commas, that introduce dependent clauses,-- and the comma-dash combos that writer Nicholson Baker has styled "commashes." Of course, Pynchon capitalizes nouns except when he doesn't in "Mason & Dixon," and even less consistently as he goes along. This may strike some as carelessness, but there's another way to read it: as an index of how the Age of Reason was steadily overtaking "an Age of Faith, when Miracles still literally happen'd." What better way for Pynchon to memorialize the mapmakers' victory over the Indians' pantheism -- which saw divinity all around them -- than gradually to decapitalize the world, leaving us all a nation disconsolately lower- case?

So, is there anything wrong with "Mason & Dixon"? Well, the dust jacket's a mite annoying. It's two jackets, really: one a very attractice inner sleeve; the other, one of those clear plastic outer sleeves that make almost all copies of Donna Tartt's "The Secret History" look, just a few years after publication, like inadvertently laundered collar stays. Better to have spent the design money on a nice, useful map of Maryland and Pennsylvania for the endpapers.

"Mason & Dixon" will be nobody's idea of an easy read, either. "Gravity's Rainbow" has been called, one hopes wrongly, the least read bestseller of all time, and it would be an easily avoidable shame if "Mason & Dixon" suffered the same fate, since a simple trip to the library yields all the provisions a hardy reader ought to need.

A reading of Dava Sobel's award-winning short nonfiction book "Longitude" would make a concise introduction to some of the science "Mason & Dixon" takes for granted. As for Pynchon's gloriously complex style, the magnificent 1964 short story "The Secret Integration" (found in his 1984 collection "Slow Learner") has always offered the best bunny slope on which to find one's footing, before tackling the novelistic alps that lie beyond. Pack a sturdy dictionary for "Mason & Dixon," too -- the older the better -- to keep up with the best vocabulary in literature this side of Pynchon's old Cornell prof, Vladimir Nabokov.

Why go to all this trouble? Why not go pick up some other, easier book, one you don't need a decoder ring to enjoy? I can only answer firsthand that Pynchon's is writing worth the work, fiction that can change, even save, lives. There may always persist a certain signal-to-noise ratio with regard to the most challenging fiction. There may always be passages we don't quite get, or think we don't, the first time through. But my noise may be your signal, and on the next page vice versa, and with Pynchon even the noise is unmistakable as a snowflake's fingerprint, and the signal, when it returns, a revelation. Just such a revelation occurs in "Mason & Dixon" when the duo and their motley camp followers adjourn for the winter, and Mason heads north to take in a "Broad-Way" show. He enjoys it well enough, but when a promised but never quite expected elephant actually materializes before the second-act curtain, "The audience sit stunn'd in the vacuous Purity of not having been cheated." "Mason & Dixon" will win Thomas Pynchon more raves and more readers, and maybe more awards than even he can turn down, and all for "the vacuous Purity of not having been cheated."

Malibu-based writer David Kipen was senior editor of Buzz magazine at the time of this review, and is now the Senior Book Editor for the San Francisco Chronicle.

 

Mason & Dixon
Mason & Dixon - Thomas Pynchon