Book Review

John O'Hara:
A Study of the Short Fiction  
By Robert Saliba

Although this book, whose author is a O'Hara Society pal Steven Goldleaf, is out of print,  my wife, Jenny, obtained a copy for my 70th birthday a few days before the Annual General Meeting in Princeton, where I met the author, the Society's newest member, a Pace University professor, who autographed the book.  
This 135-page book (excluding the other materials at the end) is a gem and belongs in the library of every reader of John O'Hara. My advice is never read a John O'Hara short story without having this book next to you as a reference teaching guide. 

Years ago, when I began reading John O'Hara, I went to the library and tried to find essays and criticisms that could give me a better understanding of the writings. I read a lot of these that were contemporaneous with the books and stories as they were published, and I was very disappointed. In my sixties then, I had enough self confidence (I wouldn't or couldn't have done this as a college student in my twenties) to reject all these critics (I think John O'Hara once said "The hell with the critics"). I got it and they didn't. And I felt the same way even after ploughing through the later essays of John Updike, Fran Liebowitz and Louis Begley. 

This book is different. This author gets it. You can read it in an evening, but you won't get its full impact. 

From the 1920's through the 1960's John O'Hara wrote 383 stories. Professor Goldleaf divides these stories into three separate periods - 1920's and 1930's, 1940's and 1950's, and 1960's (When John O'Hara really produced  - 150 stories and much longer in average length than the earlier ones). It's all there -- Gibbsville, California, New York. 

What I have learned from Professor Goldleaf: There are the stories I've never read. So it's back to basics: Go to the chronology and, beginning with 'The Doctor's Son and other Stories,' get all the books and read all the stories. Then there are the stories I've read but don't remember. So Jenny and I have begun re-reading them again. 

Then there are the stories I've read and remember but didn't fully understand until I read Professor Goldleaf's book. On every page this short book drips with insight after insight after insight. Some of these stories I've read several times but still didn't really get the full impact until Professor Goldleaf, a trained academic with no ax to grind, quietly and analytically, with flawless writing style (he doesn't split infinitives) explains them. 

In Appointment in Samarra, on Julian's last night, when he's all alone, he plays three records. I got these recordings and listened to them, and as a result I've a much deeper grasp, it's a very emotional thing, as to understanding that scene. (I suppose it could be said that my understanding would be enhanced if I poured whiskey into an empty vase and drank from it, and I haven't done that). With this study of the short fiction, it's not music but rigorous intellectual analysis, and the result is the same as with the music. My life is enriched.

Thanks, Steven. 

Some Changes to O'Hara's Original

Rod Serling, right below
More on 'It'Mental Work,'
the Television Show
By Richard Rabicoff
More on the Bob Hope Chrysler Theater presentation of It's Mental Work, from Internet Movie Database   http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0528190/.


The production was actually December 20, 1963.  It was originally scheduled for November 22, 1963, but postponed due to NBC's coverage of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
My comment:
Among other adaptational travesties, the lawyer Conn in John O'Hara's original (no doubt Jewish) was changed to Vito Conte (no doubt Italian) in the TV script.  Is it possible that Serling thought that having a Jewish shyster would be perceived as anti-Semitic? 
Also the black assistant played by Archie Moore was the recipient of several racial barbs from the Italian.  No doubt the liberal Serling wanted to give the O'Hara added "relevance" by adding a civil rights subtheme.

Richard Rabicoff
Perry Hall, MD 21128

There with O'Hara Ghost


AGM at Nassau Inn, Princeton:
Afternoon of Saturday, 30 January

From left, Joan Kane; Sharon who accompanied Steve Goodleaf; Charlie Epstein with Catol Gramer; Robert and Jenny Saliba; Robert Knott; Richard Carreno; Bill and Carol Ritter Wright. (That's a photo of Bill Bradley, former US Senator and Princeton graduate, top left).

Contact us at JohnOHaraSoc@yahoo.com. We're always looking for contributors. Join the conversation! © 2010 Writers Clearinghouse, Est. 1976 @ Fabyan, Connecticut.

From Roberta Saliba

New Companion Guide to Samarra

I went on OHara.blogspot.com, but wasn't quite sure how to post the following:

Today, January 31, 2010, is the 105th anniversary of John O'Hara's birth at 125 Mahantongo Street, Pottsville, Pennsylvania, son of Dr. Patricia H. and Katherine Delaney O'Hara.


Yesterday's Annual General Meeting in Princeton reminded me of a passage from From the Terrace, where Alfred Eaton, a student in his Princeton dormitory room in January 1917, reads a newspaper clipping of the murder-suicide of his old girl friend Norma Budd and her paramour:

"Alfred re-read the newspaper and put it down and looked out the window and saw nothing but what there was to see: the hard ground, some of it dug up for trench warfare exercises; the leafless trees; the young men in civilian clothing and some in the uniform of the officers' training units; the corners of dormitories; the tops of towers; the groundkeeper's wagon. There was not a woman in sight and not a man in this little world of men who had known Norma Budd, who had felt anything with her. He noticed a man with a Krag slung from his shoulder; an older, Regular Army man, a sergeant. who was probably on his way to teach some younger men to shoot."

Page 203, Random House, 1958.

I also want to review Pam MacArthur's and Steven Goldleaf's books and make short mention of my own project on the Companion Guide to Appointment in Samarra.

AGM

New DVD?

Thanks, Richard. I wish I could have made the meeting. What is the new DVD?


I see in Internet Move Database (imd.com) that Robert Loggia will be starring a movie called "Over the River and Through the Wood(s)" but there is no other information. Could this be an O'Hara adaptation?


Richard Rabicoff
9356 Indian Trail Way
Perry Hall, MD 21128


Contact us at JohnOHaraSoc@yahoo.com. We're always looking for contributors. Join the conversation! © 2009 Writers Clearinghouse, Est. 1976 @ Fabyan, Connecticut.