Volume 49 and white noise cry Pynchon's novel 49th cry has much in common with Don DeLillo's book "White Noise". Both novels can share certain types of characters, plot structures, and parts of themes. The similarity between the two pieces clearly shows the cultural concepts shared by the two influential and respected contemporary writers. The similarities between the characters of both novels appear in the main characters, but other people do not touch that land.
To illustrate that the task can take many forms, Foster analyzed Thomas Pinchin's story of a 20th century novel "Cry No. 49". The scream of the 49th lot definitely does not match the traditional motif of the task - the hero is not a knight, but a young married woman, her journey is taking place in modern California, her challenge and dragons are other Stabilizing Therapist and Possible Postal Plot Despite these differences, Foster is a task novel in which the book essentially ends with a deep change in self recognition and understanding, with the purpose of the established travel of the hero disappearing I believe there is. According to Mr. Foster, one of the most convincing features of this story is the character's name Oedipa, which derives from the tragic character of Oedipus (circa 425 BC). He does not know himself
Thomas Pinchon's "No 49 Crying", a brilliant gem of metaphors and metaphors, extracted from thermodynamics, mathematics and information theory, is an example of an increasingly prominent imaginative literary genre. Problems in which novels are clearly composed as semiotics or meanings are more like puzzles than stories. Therefore, it is questionable as to whether it marks a point in the development of the novel, just like the era when the camera was perfect, when the painter gave up most of the representative art of the "abstract" art of mind . CL 49 contains a similar deviation from the original proposal from Oedipa Maas, whose hero's name