geography


14
Aug 09

Thomas Guide

Wired has put together a super cool google map of Thomas Pynchon’s Los Angeles. It’s like seeing my city annotated with a complete map of the conspiracy.

Little known fact: Thomas Pynchon, the paranoid poet of the information age, is LA’s greatest writer. To be sure, Los Angeles—whose aerial view he likened to a printed circuit board—has always been central to the elusive writer’s weird weltanschauung, his hallucinogenic stir-fry of Cold War hysteria, high tech anxiety, and low-brow pop-culture references. But did you know he actually lived there in the ’60s and early ’70s, while writing Gravity’s Rainbow, the Moby-Dick of rocket-science novels? His latest effort, Inherent Vice, is an homage to those bygone days, plus something no one expected from the notoriously private author: a semiautobiographical romp.

via The Unofficial Thomas Pynchon Guide to Los Angeles .

  • Share/Bookmark

29
Jun 09

Disappearing Waterfall

via Joshua Foer at BoingBoing:


devilskettlefalls.jpg

“There is a mysterious waterfall in Judge Magney State Park in Minnesota. Half of the water drops 50 feet into the Brule river; the other half falls into a cauldron and disappears! Dyes and ping pong balls have been dropped into the pothole in an attempt to trace its route and find its outlet–presumably the water winds its way underground to Lake Superior a mile away–but the other end of the Devil’s Kettle has yet to be found.”

http://www.boingboing.net/2009/06/28/the-devils-kettle.html

  • Share/Bookmark
Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes