Inherent Vice is a 2009 novel by Thomas Pynchon. Ostensibly it follows Doc Sportello, a private investigator in California trying to find a missing real estate developer on the behest of his ex-girlfriend but really the work explores a much wider set of themes including the sex, drugs and rock and roll lifestyle of the '60s and its clashes with forces of law and order with a neo-noir sensibility.
This novel contains examples of the following tropes:[]
- Conspiracy Kitchen Sink: The Golden Fang. The Viggies. The Boards. Mickey Wolfmann. Wherever you look, a new conspiracy pops up.
- Femme Fatale: Shasta starts off as one, but Pynchon once again subverts the trope by the end of the book.
- Mushroom Samba: Notably with the vision quest Doc goes on.
- Private Detective: Doc Sportello is a deconstruction of the usual noir archetype. Typically stoned, doesn't really shake anybody down, so on.
- Properly Paranoid: Denis and Doc himself at various points in the book.
- The Stoner: Doc and a lot of his friends and neighbours. Even his parents. Basically everyone in the book.