Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts

John O'Hara: Strange Characters

O'HARA'S NOVELS RE-EXAMINED
By William Vollman
The Baffler

Books Discussed
John O’Hara, Appointment in Samarra (New York: Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition, 2013; first published 1934).
John O’Hara, BUtterfield 8 (New York: Penguin Classics, 2013; first published 1935).
John O’Hara, Ten North Frederick (New York: Penguin Classics, 2014; first published 1955).
John O’Hara, The New York Stories (New York: Penguin Classics, 2013; first published 1932–1966).

John O’Hara’s themes are alcoholism, infidelity, rape, perversion, child molestation, the yearning for power and financial security (many who knew the author believed this to be his own basic preoccupation), the instability of love and passion, the effects of economic substructures on the superstructures of private life (in method, if certainly not in ideology, he resembles a Marxist), boardroom and statehouse politics, and the secret corruptions of families.

John O'Hara Remembered

 
Norman Mailer almost killed one of his wives. John O'Hara, when besotted by drink, was no gentleman. But in today's lit'ry circles, Mailer often gets a pass. O'Hara never does. Get to meet 'the Master of the Fancied Slight,' as O'Hara was known, in the following brilliant new dissection of the author's life by Charles F. McElwee III.  
 
Touchy, Touchy 
By Charles F. McElwee III
 
John O'Hara wanted acceptance, but acceptance required penance. The author's acerbic, self-destructive personality limited the accolades and tributes he demanded. O'Hara had too many enemies, and he added many in his exhausting life. An Olympian grudge holder, O'Hara routinely blacklisted friends for no particular reason.
 
He was a brawler, a boozer and a blowhard - the holy trinity of a jerk. Bars were O'Hara's boxing rings, and he slugged and rumbled at negligible or imagined provocations. He threw fists at a dwarf in New York's "21" Club, only to be knocked down by another dwarf who joined the fight. He even smacked a woman for a tardy lunch arrival. The high society O'Hara craved loathed him for his alcohol-soaked brutality. Everyone knew him as "a master of the fancied slight." 
 

David Loovis on John O'Hara

Paperback 1961 edition now available at amazon.com for $119.
Go to philabooks@yahoo.com re other O'Hara and Brooks Brothers books.
O'Hara 'Rolled Mightily'

The late David Loovis,, the author Try for Elegance, a roman a clef with an unnamed Brooks Brothers at its centre, and a main floor salesman at the BB flagship at 346 Madison Avenue for more than ten years, told me in 1986 letter:



I met John O'Hara at the store once. He leaned heavily on his cane as we spoke. It was just after I had published my first Scribner novel and he asked what I thought about the publisher. I said I was proud to be with them and that I hoped they'd advertise the book, "Try for Elegance," with vigor. He cautioned me not to expect too much as Scribner's followed the line of the old British publishers in depending a goo deal on word-of-mouth. I remember that he wore a heavy tweed suit and that his blue oxford cloth collar rolled mightily.


Loovis said that he was working on BB book at the time. Apparently, that project never came to fruition.
 
Go to the following link for more:
 
www.ivy-style.com/bohemian-in-a-brooks-brothers-suit.htmlCached - Similar

-- Richard Carreño/The Philadelphia Junto
--

John O'Hara Collection: For Sale, or For Donation?

'Everything Must Go!'
That is the Question
See real-time updates, as amendments warrant, at www.JohnOHaraCollecton.yolasite.com.

@philabooks|booksellers, an on-line Philadelphia bookshop that's unique in featuring titles by and about the author John O'Hara, has merged its extensive catalog with an exclusive, privately-owned O'Hara collection to create a now one-of-a-kind compilation of the legendary New Yorker writer's works.

The new catalog, consolidated as the Carreño-Checket Collection, is named for Richard Carreño, the managing partner of @philabooks, and the late James Checket of Lebanon, Pennsylvania, a private collector and a member of the John O'Hara Society. Carreño is a founding member of the Society.

@philabooks entered into the merger agreement with James Checket's estate, administered by his widow, Sally Miller.

The newly assembled collection includes more than one hundred titles, with firsts of virtually all of O'Hara's English-language and foreign language editions. The collection, when fully fleshed out, will also include photographs, magazines, and related ephemera. As such, it will be among the most comprehensive non-institutional O'Hara collections anywhere.

Carreño said he and Miller want to maintain the collection as a unit. Their aim, he said, is to sell or donate the collection to a private or public institution that can safeguard it as well give the public access to it.

 Interested parties can contact Carreño via philabooks@yahoo.com. A regularly updated catalog is also available via www.philabooks.webs.com. Updates will also be posted to the John O'Hara Society blog via www.OHaraSociety.blogspot.com.
Contact us at JohnOHaraSoc@yahoo.com. We're always looking for contributors and comment. Join the conversation! © 2012 Writers Clearinghouse Est. 1976 @ Fabyan, Connecticut.

VERY RARE O'HARA FIRST...

... Hope of Heaven Now Available
from @philabooks|booksellers

VG/G 1938 Harcourt First $125.00. 20 Percent off to Society members. Contact Richard via philabooks@yahoo.com for details.

Contact us at JohnOHaraSoc@yahoo.com. We're always looking for contributors and comment. Join the conversation! © 2011 Writers Clearinghouse Est. 1976 @ Fabyan, Connecticut.

Better Late Than Never

O'Hara's Novels Still 'Arresting'

That's what Benjamin Schwarz writes in reviewing The Sky's the Limit by Steven Gaines (Little, Brown), a book that describes so-called Good Buildings, or particular luxury buildings in New York. '...[W]hat makes this book really fascinating is what makes suc dated books as Cleveland Amory's and Stephen Birmingham's portraits of the rich and well-born, and John O'Hara's novels, still arresting: the analysis of minute social gradations within the privileged classes.' The Atlantic Monthly, May 2005.


Contact us at JohnOHaraSoc@yahoo.com. We're always looking for contributors and comment. Join the conversation! © 2011 Writers Clearinghouse Est. 1976 @ Fabyan, Connecticut.

Saliba on O'Hara

O'Hara and the  Bourgeoisie

The Genteel John O'Hara
Pamela C. MacArthur
Peter Lang, 2009

By Robert Saliba
There's that scene in BUtterfield 8 where Jim Malloy goes to a party in a New York apartment, gets drunk and obnoxious and starts a fight, and a lot of people say yes, that's John O'Hara -- ignorant, pugnacious, unruly, and when I recall that scene I think of an alternate title to The Genteel John O'Hara: 'Pamela Pushes Back.' This book belongs on the shelf next to Matthew Bruccoli's The O'Hara Concern. 

No doubt John O'Hara had his issues, but there was another side to him, and in the preface to her meticulously researched book, Dr. Mac Arthur writes: 

"I attempt to portray a loving polished gentleman and family man who suffered from neglect by the literary world yet became not only a  literary artist but a gentleman (with the attributes of an ethnographer, geographer and social historian) who recreated "The Anthracite Region" and its people so well that he recorded the late Nineteenth Century and the first half of the American Twentieth Century in novelistic form."

Dr. Mac Arthur begins by demolishing the ugly racial stereotype. John O'Hara was born into a family whose ancestors had been in America for many generations. His parents were educated, well-bred intellectuals. His father, Dr. Patrick O'Hara, was a prominent pioneering medical physician, a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania.

His mother, Katherine Delany O'Hara, was schooled in music and the arts and literature and instilled in her children good manners and a love for learning. The parents were moneyed, clean-living, cultured, and enjoyed a good reputation in the community. You take this family background and upbringing, combine it with superior intelligence and the ability to write, and you see why John O'Hara got where he got. 

There's another scene in BUtterfield 8, the one where Jim Malloy is in a speakeasy with Isabel Stannard (one of Caroline's two friends who sail with her to France in June 1925), and he gives his memorable "I am a Mick" diatribe -- meaning that no matter how Americanized and polished he may be, he'll  always be that little Irish kid. And Dr. Mac Arthur shows us how John O'Hara was always looking up Mahantongo Street, trying to make it with the WASP aristocracy, particularly those two women -- Margaretta Archbald (the love of his life, who is Natalie in Winter Dance) and Gladys Suender (who is Natalie in From the Terrace). 

I've driven through Pottsville and walked its streets and failed to imagine that once upon a time there really was this important city inhabited by the likes of the Froggy Ogdens, Whit Hofmans and Julian Englishes and Joe Chapins, with its men's club, its country club, and its Assembly.

Last January, at the Society's Annual Meeting in Princeton, one of our members, Carol Ritter Wright, told me you could see the once upon a time if you looked at the architecture, and reflecting on that I agree with her. 

Dr. Mac Arthur confirms the accuracy of John O'Hara's descriptions. She has lived in Potsville. She has walked its streets, researched its public records, interviewed its citizens. With an enormous amount of hard, meticulous, exhaustive work, she shows how Gibbsville and Pottsville are essentially identical.

John O'Hara got it right. At one time Pottsville, as the center of the anthracite industry, was one of the wealthiest cities in America. There really was an upper class elite - twenty-five leading families who dictated the social customs and mores. There's that part in her book where she takes us through Ten North Frederick and shows us how it reflects the reality of Pottsville with its people and customs. There is also a chapter on the gangster element (Ed Charney et. al.). 

We are also shown how John O'Hara was a loving husband and family man. His first marriage broke up, but his second and third marriages were successful. 

At the end there is a section on what is being done by many people to revive the John O'Hara reputation, and favorable mention is made of Richard: "Richard D. Carreno, corresponding secretary of the John O'Hara Society based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, has resurrected John Henry O'Hara's name with marked success. The Society offers John O'Hara paraphernalia from audio tapes to Carreno's edited John O'Hara Compendium which was published in 2008." 

I think all  O'Hara fans share an anger at his not being put at the top of the literary establishment, and Dr. Mac Arthur gives us a second reason to be angry. What is the antonym for "genteel"?

***

I also want to mention Dr. Mc Arthur's 1999 John O'Hara's Anthracite Region. It's a narrative accompanied by vintage photographs and postcards, and it is also superb. I saw the photograph of the inside of a department store and said yes, that's exactly what I saw in Appointment in Samarra, that's where Julian stole. The same thing with the freight train, which Julian and Butch hitched when escaping the police. And the picnic grove where Jim Malloy and Isabel Barley had their fling, but not quite: no picnic table, Pamela.  

Let's See Your O'Hara Books!

Philadelphia l August 2009

Dear Colleagues -->
If you're a collector of the works of John O'Hara, you might want to list your holdings at the John O'Hara Society website.

Whether you are simply a collector and/or dealer, thinking about purchases or sales, listing your titles and other O'Hara materials will surely help in rounding out your O'Haraia, or make it possible for someone else to do so.

How you want to list your collection is up to you. If you're selling, establishing condition, the extent of detail, the volume of listings, and price is your choice. If you're a collector who simply wants to permanently record your collection and make its existence known to the public, that's OK, too.

For all involved, there will be no better way or venue to announce your want lists -- and speak directly to more than 100 persons who are established O'Hara fans.

Send your lists via an in-text e-mail (no attachments, please) to:
JohnOHaraSociety@yahoo.com. Of course, this a FREE service..

Yours,
Richard


Contact us at JohnOHaraSociety@yahoo.com, or by telephone at +(00)12672531086. We're always looking for contributors. Join the conversation! © 2009 Writers Clearinghouse.

O'Hara....

Misses a Few Cylinders....
I have verified that the original manuscript of Appointment in Samarra states that Al Grecco was driving a V-61 Cadillac coach. Thanks to Sandra Stelts, Curator of Rare Books and Manuscripts at Penn State, and thanks to our son George Saliba for his research in finding it was a V-16 (16 cylinders). I guess the author got it wrong and no one caught it.
Robert Saliba
Morristown, New Jersey

O'Hara Shelf


Washington Bookshop Highlights O'Hara
Washington
The Capitol Hill Bookshop, just behind the Capitol near Eastern Market, has a shelf, well, a pile devoted to O'Hara. Pretty much a first for the author in this day and age. The texts were nothing special. But well priced. Bookshop gets an all-round A.

--RDC

Contact us at John.OHara.Society@comcast.net, or by telephone at +(00)12672531086. We're always looking for contributors. Join the conversation! © 2009 Writers Clearinghouse.

Writer's Query

Did O'Hara Get it Wrong?

In the Companion Guide project I am working on, I think I noticed two mistakes in Appointment in Samarra, and I was wondering if you had the time whether you could check things out in your first edition.

Early on Al Grecco picks up Julian driving home from the Country Club after the drink throwing incident. The books states that Al Grecco is driving a V-61 Cadillac Coach. I went online, and there is no V-61 Cadillac Coach. There is, however, a V-16 Cadillac Coach.

In the scene where Julian wakes up the next day with a hangover, there's a reference to his Kappa Beta Phi Key. There is no Kappa Beta Phi. Instead there is of course Phi Beta Kappa.

I have an email in to Penn State. They promised me an answer. I want to look at the original manuscript to see what was written down. Was this the error of the author or the publisher.

All the more reason for the pilgrimmage to Penn State. Any help you can give me would be appreciated.

--Robert Saliba

Appointment at 75


Thanks to Christine Goldbeck:

It's the 75th Anniversary for Celebrated Pottsville Native's Controversial Novel: For 75 years, Pottsville has also been known as "Gibbsville."

By Stephen J. Pytak


Staff Writer


spytak@republicanherald.com


Published: Monday, May 11, 2009 8:20 AM EDT


For 75 years, Pottsville has also been known as "Gibbsville."


Fans of novelist John O'Hara believe it will continue to carry that designation for generations to come.

"O'Hara's works are very much relevant today because they deal with the human condition, with relationships between men and women and individuals and society," said Shenandoah native Christine M. Goldbeck, author of "A Tribute to O'Hara and Other Stories," published in 2000.

"He's relevant because the same themes he talks about in the 1920s and '30s and '40s still occur. And I believe he will be read for centuries to come," said Mark T. Major, local historian and executive director of the Schuylkill County Visitors Bureau.

This is a watermark [sic] year for the celebrated Pottsville author, the 75th anniversary of the publication of his first novel, "Appointment in Samarra," in which his fictitious version of Pottsville was introduced. Local O'Hara fans can celebrate by visiting the life-size bronze statue of O'Hara on South Centre Street, checking out one of his classic books from a local library, or taking the John O'Hara walking tour of Pottsville. Pamphlets for the tour are available at the visitors bureau, 200 E. Arch St., Pottsville.

Meanwhile, the Schuylkill County Council for the Arts, Pottsville, is planning a John O'Hara weekend dinner theatre in early November, according to Sandra Coyle, the council's executive director.

O'Hara remains popular at the Pottsville Free Public Library, according to Denise Miller, circulation manager.

"He's no Danielle Steel, James Patterson or John Grisham. But who's to say they'll remain popular in 75 years?" Miller said Thursday.

In his career, O'Hara wrote 16 novels and 402 stories, according to the Web site of The John O'Hara Society.


There are 209 O'Hara books and multiple copies of 44 O'Hara titles in the Pottsville library's collection. Since 1998, the most popular O'Hara title with patrons has been "Appointment in Samarra," Miller said.

"Since 1998, when we started keeping computer records, it's been checked out 67 times," Miller said.

According to the Dictionary of Literary Biography Vol. 324, John O'Hara, published by Thomson-Gale in 2006,

"Appointment in Samarra" was published Aug. 16, 1934. The book, which chronicled the lives of the elite and affluent of Gibbsville, is also No. 22 on The Modern Library's 100 Best Novels.

Ione Geier, a Pottsville writer, has a hardcover first edition in her collection. It's her favorite of his novels.

"I identified with the places that he wrote about and when I was older the people that he wrote about," said Geier, who said she conducted the first two John O'Hara walking tours in Pottsville in 1978 and 1980.

It centers on the self-destruction of one of Gibbsville's more popular gentlemen, Julian English, and his struggle with relationships, community and self. Told from the viewpoints of several different characters,"Appointment in Samarra" is also about manners and depicts the way in which one must abide by certain rules in order to gain acceptance to maintain social standing, according to Goldbeck and eNotes.com.

Gaining acceptance was something O'Hara had struggled with himself.

"John was aware of the social differences about which he would write as an adult. This had to do with the fact that the O'Hara family was Irish Catholic. Irish immigrants were not seen in the best of light. After all, it had not been very long since the so-called Molly Maguires were hanged for crimes against mine supervisors and operators," Goldbeck said on the Web site for the John O'Hara Society.

By writing about a place he called "Gibbsville," O'Hara was able to criticize Pottsville's social strata, said Vincent D. Balitas, Pottsville, a retired American literature professor. Balitas also started "The O'Hara Journal," a literary magazine published locally between 1978 and 1982.

"In Gibbsville, he depicted a small town and revealed the warts. He attacked the hypocrisy, the Babbitry, the arrogance of small-town nobodies. When it came out, 'Appointment in Samarra,' O'Hara was considered a traitor to Pottsville. For a small town to be told their bleeding citizens are essentially nobodies, it created problems. It created problems for him," Balitas said.

While O'Hara renamed streets, churches and office buildings in Pottsville in his novels, some of his early critics believed he was also writing about specific people.

When asked about that, Balitas said O'Hara would say "these are composites of people."

Major called "Appointment in Samarra," "a decent read," but said he wasn't sure if it was a completely accurate portrayal of the upper class in Pottsville at the time: "Can't comment on it. I didn't live in the 1920s that he lived in. But he probably did the best job that he could. You always use what you're familiar with when you write a story like that, your own experiences, your own memories."

Schuylkill County Commissioner Mantura M. Gallagher, an avid O'Hara fan, called it her favorite novel.

"I've read and re-read it countless times and each time I find something new," she said. "It's timeless. He was known for his exact depiction of the region's dialect. He captured conversations like no other author whom I've read.

Furthermore, his exact descriptions, although sometimes tedious, left the reader with an "exact picture of what he was describing," Gallagher said. "It's still readable, which is good. It's a very tight, very compact piece of modern realism. I can go back and reread it without getting bored. That's the only one of his books I can do that with," Balitas said.

Miller said other popular O'Hara titles with Pottsville library patrons and how many times they were checked out since 1998 include: "Gibbsville, PA.: The Classic Stories," 54; "Ten North Frederick," 52; "The Farmers Hotel," 19; "Rage to Live," 19; and "From the Terrace," 13.

People new to O'Hara's writing style might not find it so easy to read, said Robin James, assistant reference librarian at the Pottsville library.

"It takes a level of patience and you have to be in the right mood. It's period. It's like Shakespeare. After a week, it's light reading. I took a shot at the 'Gibbsville' book when I moved here. Then I tried some short stories. He is a total craftsman when it comes to the dialog, and the dynamics of his characters' interpersonal relationships. Got to admire the guy. He did a good job," James said.

"Once you get into his books, his stories are hard to put down. I think it's the way he tells the story. It has a lot to do with his character development. It has a lot to do with character-to-character relationships in his stories," Major said.

Major said his favorite is O'Hara's autobiographical story "The Doctor's Son."

Local theater groups have performed dramatizations of O'Hara short stories. One of the more recent was The Strawberry Playhouse production of O'Hara's "The Champagne Pool" at Schuylkill County Council for the Arts in Pottsville in October 2008 during Pottsville's Roaring '20s Week celebration.

Gallagher said the Schuylkill County Bicentennial Committee and the Schuylkill County Actors Guild are planning to host a few in 2011.

"These will be from his 'Gibbsville' book. It takes time because we have to find four appropriate short stories and convert them to dramatic form," Gallagher said.

Copyright © 2009 - The Republican & Herald

Mailer On O'Hara



Appointment Ranks Among His Top 10 Favs
Illuminates Mailer's freshman year


To Helen Morris,
The Reader's Catalogue
627 Commercial Street,
Provincetown, MA
January 16, 1988

Dear Helen Morris,
Appended is my list. With the exception of Huckleberry Finn, which I reread recently, the other nine books were devoured in my freshman year at Harvard, and gave me the desire, which has never gone completely away, to be a writer, an American writer. They're all selections from the mainstream of American novels, not a surprise on the list, which separates me, I suspect, from my colleagues. But it's an honest list, even if it doesn't bring a deserving writer out of obscurity. Freshman year at Harvard is luminous because of these books.

Yours sincerely,
Norman Mailer

Ten Favorite American Novels
U.S.A. John Dos Passos
Huckleberry Finn Mark Twain
Studs Lonigan James T. Farrell
Look Homeward, Angel Thomas Wolfe
The Grapes of Wrath John Steinbeck
The Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald
The Sun Also Rises Ernest Hemingway
Appointment in Samarra John O'Hara
The Postman Always Rings Twice James M. Cain
Moby-Dick Herman Melville

(Thanks to member Richard Rabicoff for submitting the above, gleaned from the current issue of The New York Review of Books).

Sweet Caroline...

Remembered

In the following, member Robert Saliba recalls one of the Master's most memorable female characters, Caroline English, wife of ill-fated Julian English:

In From the Terrace, sometime around 1920 Alfred Eaton briefly stops at the Lantenengo Country Club and has a chance meeting on the porch with Julian. "Come on back to the locker-room and I'll give you a shot of whiskey. My name is English. I go to Lafayette."

Several years later, in 1927, just after Alfred meets Natalie Benziger, her father, Ralth Benziger, gives Alfred a guest card to the same Lantenengo Country Club. The golf pro pairs him with Julian, and while the golf pro and Alfred are waiting for Julian to arrive, the golf pro says of Julian, "He plays a nice game when he's on his game, but he can go haywire worse than anybody I ever saw."

Natalie and Caroline are best friends. After Julian's death, Caroline tells Natalie: "What am I now? What shall I ever be? I'm a girl who had good and just cause to walk out on her husband, and now for the rest of my life I can sit here with my good and just cause...He was nice, and God help me he was nice to me."

It was the only time Natalie saw her weep. "I loved him, I loved him."

Caroline never remarries, never has any other relationship that we know about.

In Appointment, when Julian and Caroline have their altercation outside Caroline's mother's house (the Walker mansion on South Main Street), Julian begs her to go home with him and talk things over, but she refuses, and instead she stays with her mother. Later that evening Julian, at home alone and thoroughly drunk, kills himself.

Cover-Up




A Book by Its Cover

(Thanks to Richard Rabicoff for alerting me to these).

Contact us at John.OHara.Society@comcast.net, or by telephone at +(00)1:267:253:1086. We're Telling always looking for contributors. Join the conversation! © 2009 Writers Clearinghouse

Feedback

Mini-O'Hara

I never heard of this. I looked at the back of Dr. Bruccoli's biography and couldn't find it. I looked at the Modern Library website and couldn't find it. Here's a sentence from 'How Old, How Young': 'She picked up her bathing cap and pulled it on, tucking in wisps of her blonde hair, cocking her head as she did and unconsciously being extremely feminine and attractive.' It just doesn't get any better than this. See you at the AGM.
-- Robert Saliba

This little volume was part of a short-lived series. I can't recall the other titles. I believe Penguin issued something similar. They cost about $2, and were usually displayed near the cash register at Barnes & Noble, Borders, et al. They post-dated Bruccoli's bibliography by many years. I don't recall that they were reviewed anywhere, though there could have been something in the old Random House promotional literature. They must be pretty rare; I never see them. You were lucky to find it. The volume is certainly an anomaly of O'Hara publishing and if you blinked you missed it.
--Richard Rabicoff


Thanks for the response! Just for the record, the mini wasn't in Bruccoli's A Descriptive Bibliography, either. Again, the ante-dated thing. Thanks, Richard, for reminding me of the Penguin series. I have three, or four of these that I bought in London during the mid-90s.
-- Richard Carreño

Modern Library

New to Me!
I confused. Of course, this is a state that's not entirely alien to me. But, this time, I'm confused about a Modern Library edition of two John O'Hara short stories in a little book, really a smallish 56-page pamphlet -- the pubisher calls it a 'mini' -- that appeared in 1996. Why the confusion? I never knew the booklet, containing 'We'll Have Fun' and 'How Old, How Young,' existed.

Like many of us, I employ Matt Bruccoli's catalogue raisonee as the ultimate arbiter of all things published by O'Hara. And this slim text, titled We'll Have Fun, to my inspection, isn't listed. Huh?

I found the booklet yesterday in one of my least favourite local bookshops, the Last Word near Penn. (The folks there apparently haven't heard about the Internet. The shop is wildly overpriced for a used-book outlet. Yes, I got fleeced. But I WANTED the book, one of the few items that I don't have in my O'Hara collection).

Anyway, please enlighten. I'm aware, of course, of other Modern Library O'Hara editions. But how did this mini slip through the cracks? Or, is it simply my bad?
--RDC

Contact us at John.OHara.Society@comcast.net, or by telephone at +(00)1:267:253:1086. We're always looking for contributors. Join the conversation! © 2009 Writers Clearinghouse

O'Hara Compendium Now On Sale!

The John O'Hara Compendium!
More than 200 photocopied pages of O'Hara history, bio, and lore, including never-seen-before FBI investigative reports. Being newspaper clippings, brochures, letters, press releases, photographs, original documents, and other ephemera collected over the years that have NOT migrated to the Internet.
For $19.99! (20% discount for members, or $15.99!) Please add $2.00 P&H (FOB Philadelphia) for domestic orders. Request details for foreign shipping.
Edited by Richard Carreño, secretary of the John O'Hara Society. Available exclusively from Writers Clearinghouse Press.
This is the stuff that's not on the Internet. The stuff that's not on line at OHaraSociety.blogspot.com. Researched documents from 1951 to 2006.
Plus postage/handling.
For details, contact Writers Clearinghouse Press at Writers.Clearinghouse@comcast.net, or ring anytime at +(00)1 :267:253.1086.

Modern Library's Top 100







Appointment Ranks 22

O'Hara's Appointment in Samarra, the author's first novel, is ranked 22 best novel of 100 novels evaluated in The Modern Library's 100 Best Novels.

James Joyce's Ulysses is No. 1. Among American short story writers, contemporary with O'Hara, are F. Scott Fitzgerald at No. 2 with The Great Gatsby, William Faulkner at No. 6 with The Sound and the Fury, and John Steinbeck at No. 10 with The Grapes of Wrath.

Interestingly, Ernest Hemingway doesn't get mentioned until the No. 45 spot with The Sun Also Rises. J.D. Salinger, with The Catcher in the Rye, settles in, well behind the Squire, at No. 64.