Delve into the riveting world of 'Shadow Ticket,' a New York Times Bestseller and a notable book of 2025 according to The New York Times and The Washington Post. Also celebrating its accolade as a TIME Best Book of 2025, this compelling narrative is penned by esteemed author Thomas Pynchon, known for landmark novels such as 'Gravity's Rainbow,' 'The Crying of Lot 49,' and 'Inherent Vice.' Set against the tumultuous backdrop of 1932 Milwaukee during the Great Depression, 'Shadow Ticket' follows Hicks McTaggart, a former strikebreaker turned private investigator. His seemingly straightforward mission to locate and retrieve a wandering heiress of a Wisconsin cheese fortune quickly spirals into an unexpected adventure across continents, leading him to Hungary—a land with obscure languages and delectable pastries, but no sign of the heiress. As Hicks navigates a maze filled with Nazis, Soviet agents, British counterspies, and more, he is unprepared and unpaid for the dangers that threaten his journey. Amid the emergence of the Big Band Era, Hicks's talent for dancing might be his only hope to return to a possibly non-existent 'normal' world. 'Shadow Ticket' expertly combines historical elements with spy intrigue, encased in Pynchon's signature brilliant and bizarre storytelling. Praised as both 'a masterpiece' by The Telegraph and 'bonkers and brilliant fun' by The Washington Post, this novel is a testament to Pynchon’s prowess, affording readers a complex, humor-laden exploration of a world on the brink of change.
Thomas Pynchon was born in Glen Cove, New York on May 8, 1937. In 1959 he graduated with a B.A. in English from Cornell, where he had taken Vladimir Nabokov's famous course in modern literature after studying engineering physics and serving in the U.S. Navy for two years. He worked as a technical writer at Boeing for two and a half years. Pynchon won the Faulkner First Novel Award for V. in 1963, and in The Crying of Lot 49 (1966), again his symbolism and commentary on the United States and human isolation have been praised as intricate and masterly, though some reviewers found it to be maddeningly dense. With this book Pynchon won the Rosenthal Foundation Award. Gravity's Rainbow, winner of the National Book Award for Fiction in 1974, is in part a fictional elegy and meditation on death and an encyclopedic work that jumps through time. Pynchon has also written numerous essays, reviews, and introductions, plus the fictional works Slow Learner, Vineland, Mason & Dixon, Against the Day, and Inherent Vice. His title Bleeding Edge made The New York Times Best Seller List for 2013. He is famous for his reclusive nature, although he has made several animated appearances on The Simpsons television series.
| Condition | Price | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Used Good (19 available)
Former Library Book |
$9.99 USD | Add To Cart |
Ships directly from Better World Books |
|
|
Used Very Good (7 available)
Former Library Book |
$9.99 USD | Add To Cart |
Ships directly from Better World Books |
|
|
New (640 available)
Ships Separately |
$24.78 USD | Add To Cart | Ships separately from Better World Books suppliers | |
|
eBook Obtain a digital book from our friends at eBooks.com.
|
{{ebooksDotComPrice}} {{ebooksDotComCurrency}} | eBooks.com | Digital edition from eBooks.com | |
|
Audio Book Obtain a digital book from our friends at AudiobooksNow.com.
|
{{audioBooksNowPrice}} {{audioBooksNowCurrency}} | AudiobooksNow.com | Digital edition from AudiobooksNow.com |
| Find at your local library from our friends at WorldCat | Find Libraries |
Delve into the riveting world of 'Shadow Ticket,' a New York Times Bestseller and a notable book of 2025 according to The New York Times and The Washington Post. Also celebrating its accolade as a TIME Best Book of 2025, this compelling narrative is ...
Read full overview
Delve into the riveting world of 'Shadow Ticket,' a New York Times Bestseller and a notable book of 2025 according to The New York Times and The Washington Post. Also celebrating its accolade as a TIME Best Book of 2025, this compelling narrative is penned by esteemed author Thomas Pynchon, known for landmark novels such as 'Gravity's Rainbow,' 'The Crying of Lot 49,' and 'Inherent Vice.' Set against the tumultuous backdrop of 1932 Milwaukee during the Great Depression, 'Shadow Ticket' follows Hicks McTaggart, a former strikebreaker turned private investigator. His seemingly straightforward mission to locate and retrieve a wandering heiress of a Wisconsin cheese fortune quickly spirals into an unexpected adventure across continents, leading him to Hungary—a land with obscure languages and delectable pastries, but no sign of the heiress. As Hicks navigates a maze filled with Nazis, Soviet agents, British counterspies, and more, he is unprepared and unpaid for the dangers that threaten his journey. Amid the emergence of the Big Band Era, Hicks's talent for dancing might be his only hope to return to a possibly non-existent 'normal' world. 'Shadow Ticket' expertly combines historical elements with spy intrigue, encased in Pynchon's signature brilliant and bizarre storytelling. Praised as both 'a masterpiece' by The Telegraph and 'bonkers and brilliant fun' by The Washington Post, this novel is a testament to Pynchon’s prowess, affording readers a complex, humor-laden exploration of a world on the brink of change.
Thomas Pynchon was born in Glen Cove, New York on May 8, 1937. In 1959 he graduated with a B.A. in English from Cornell, where he had taken Vladimir Nabokov's famous course in modern literature after studying engineering physics and serving in the U.S. Navy for two years. He worked as a technical writer at Boeing for two and a half years. Pynchon won the Faulkner First Novel Award for V. in 1963, and in The Crying of Lot 49 (1966), again his symbolism and commentary on the United States and human isolation have been praised as intricate and masterly, though some reviewers found it to be maddeningly dense. With this book Pynchon won the Rosenthal Foundation Award. Gravity's Rainbow, winner of the National Book Award for Fiction in 1974, is in part a fictional elegy and meditation on death and an encyclopedic work that jumps through time. Pynchon has also written numerous essays, reviews, and introductions, plus the fictional works Slow Learner, Vineland, Mason & Dixon, Against the Day, and Inherent Vice. His title Bleeding Edge made The New York Times Best Seller List for 2013. He is famous for his reclusive nature, although he has made several animated appearances on The Simpsons television series.
| Condition | Source | Price | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Used Good (19 available)
Former Library Book Former Library Book Ships from |
Ships directly from Better World Books |
$9.99 USD | Add To Cart |
|
Used Very Good (7 available)
Former Library Book Former Library Book Ships from |
Ships directly from Better World Books |
$9.99 USD | Add To Cart |
|
New (640 available)
Ships Separately |
Ships separately from Better World Books suppliers | $24.78 USD | Add To Cart |
|
eBook Obtain a digital book from our friends at eBooks.com.
|
Digital edition from eBooks.com | {{ebooksDotComPrice}} {{ebooksDotComCurrency}} | eBooks.com |
|
Audio Book Obtain a digital book from our friends at AudiobooksNow.com.
|
|
{{audioBooksNowPrice}} {{audioBooksNowCurrency}} | Audiobook |
*This is a limited preview of the contents of this book and does not directly represent the item available for sale.*
You are now leaving the Better World Books website to complete your transaction. Your eBook download will be facilitated by our friends at eBooks.com. Thank you for your support and for shopping with Better World Books!
You are now leaving the Better World Books website to complete your transaction. Your audio book download will be facilitated by our friends at AudiobooksNow.com. Thank you for your support and for shopping with Better World Books!
You are now leaving the Better World Books website. Thank you for your support and for shopping with Better World Books!