Shadow Ticket by Thomas Pynchon review – his first novel in 12 years tunes into rising fascism in the US
<p>The 88-year-old’s jaunty whodunnit, set during the prohibition era, features clowns, Nazis and a missing cheese heiress</p><p>Everything is connected in Shadow Ticket, Thomas Pynchon’s fleet-footed noir fiction about a lindy-hopping detective in prohibition-era Wisconsin. The homemade bomb connects to the runaway cheese heiress, the cheese heiress to the federal agents, and the feds to the pro‑Nazi leagues at the bowling lanes outside town. Early-30s Milwaukee, in turn, is connected to powder-keg central Europe, where paramilitary groups have pitched camp on the Hungaro-Croatian border and guest speakers wax lyrical about “our immense fascist future”. Most likely it connects to the current moment as well, albeit wryly and slyly, with a nonchalant swing. That’s the implied final move of this merry dance of a book: the point where the past links its hands with the present.</p><p>Shadow Ticket is a Pynchon novel – the 88-year-old’s first in 12 years; his ninth overall – and so it naturally connects to the man’s back catalogue, too, and its abiding fascination with conspiracy, chaos and the churn of American pop culture. Specifically it relates back to his two previous works –<a href="https://www.theguardian.com/books/2009/aug/01/thomas-pynchon-inherent-vice-review"> Inherent Vice</a> and <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/books/2013/sep/13/bleeding-edge-thomas-pynchon-review">Bleeding Edge</a> – in that the story comes tailored as a dime-store whodunnit, complete with red herrings, plot twists and reams of hard-boiled dialogue. But classifications, like people, are never entirely to be trusted. Pynchon inhabits the genre like a hermit crab inside a mollusc shell, periodically peeking out from the gloom to remind us that he’s there.</p> <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/books/2025/sep/30/shadow-ticket-by-thomas-pynchon-review-his-first-novel-in-12-years-tunes-into-rising-fasc
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