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'Superb... These thirty-two stories inhabit the Technicolor vernaculars of taxi drivers, barbers, paper pushers and society matrons... O'Hara was American fiction's greatest eavesdropper, recording the everyday speech and tone of all strata of mid-century society' Wall Street Journal John O'Hara remains the great chronicler of American society, and nowhere are his powers more evident than in his portraits of New York's so-called Golden Age. Unsparingly observed, brilliantly cutting and always on the tragic edge of epiphany, the stories collected here are among O'Hara's finest work, and show why he still stands as the most-published short story writer in the history of the New Yorker.
The writer whom Fran Lebowitz compared to the author of "The Great
Gatsby, "calling him "the real F. Scott Fitzgerald," makes his
Penguin Classics debut with this beautiful deluxe edition of his
best-loved book.
From A to Z, the Penguin Drop Caps series collects 26 unique
hardcovers--featuring cover art by Jessica Hische
The National Book Award-winning novel by the writer whom Fran
Lebowitz called "the real F. Scott Fitzgerald"
'The Academy for Souls' is essential for anyone who wants to keep his or her intellectual or spiritual bearings in a world overwrought by the conflicting theories of Einstein, Eddington, Jeans, Whitehead and Bertrand Russell. The argument leans neither on revelation nor theology, but attempts to demolish the dogmatism of current science, and to laugh behaviourism out of court.
The Personal Pistols of Adolf Hitler is a compilation of letters, documents and facts pertaining to the Walther pistols owned and used by Adolf Hitler. These pistols are now in the possession of his genetic biological son.The Hitler guns trial was part of a serious clandestine British Government conspiracy, deliberately contrived, and maliciously set up to destroy the international credibility of Adolf Hitlers son.
The best-loved poems from one of American literature's most towering figures
Richard Hubert ("Hubie") Ward is a wily young actor from the Easternmost world of prep schools and summers on the Cape. By the time he is twenty-five, he has lied, cheated, and seduced his way to the big-time on the Coast. Hollywood prizes Hubie for his air of respectability: "He was not a Latin or a Jew...he was not a booze artist...he was not actorish, he was not pugnacious...he was of the theater, he had been given good notices in an Art picture, he was not confused by an oyster fork, he stood up when ladies entered the room..". But Hubie's blind ambition quickly strips away the guise. He blackmails the man who gave him his first acting job, then spends an amorous afternoon with the wife of a studio head who happens to be his boss. Nothing, it seems, can stop the self-destructive philandering that dogs this shooting star.
'More than any other American novelist, O'Hara has both reflected his times and captured the unique individual for generations to come' LA Times 'On this Sunday morning in May, this girl who was later to be the cause of a sensation in New York awoke much too early for her night before' This particular morning Gloria finds herself alone in a stranger's apartment with nothing but a torn evening dress and her stockings and underwear. When she takes a fur coat from the wardrobe to wear home, she sets in train a series of events that will lead to tragedy. A bestseller on its first publication, BUtterfield 8 is the glittering story of a 1930s glamour girl whose ill-starred entanglement with a respectable married man is set against a backdrop of Manhattan bars and bedrooms.
A momentous bestseller when it was first published in 1949, John
O'Hara's sprawling novel A Rage to Live offers up a gorgeous
pageant of idealists and libertines, tradesmen and crusaders, men
of violence and goodwill, and women of fierce strength and
tenderness. These memorable characters and their vital stories add
up to a large-scale social chronicle of America, in what is perhaps
the most ambitious work of O'Hara's career. "From the Trade Paperback edition."
'This is fiction, but it has, for me, the clang of truth' John Updike WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY E. L. DOCTOROW John O'Hara is widely credited with inventing the New Yorker short story, and remains the most-published short story writer in the history of the magazine. Selected from his vast collection of short fiction written over forty years, these refreshingly frank, sparely written stories show him at his best. Exposing a world of bartenders and 'b-girls', car washers and criminals, O'Hara dissects the subtleties that bind humans together and the pressures that separate them.
'For all its excellence as a social panorama and a sketch of a marriage, it is as a picture of a man destroyed by drink and pride that Appointment in Samarra lives frighteningly in the mind' John Updike Julian English prides himself a member of his hometown's social elite, but from the moment he throws a cocktail in the face of a powerful business associate his life spirals out of control, taking his loving but troubled marriage with it. Following English's rapid decline and fall, Appointment in Samarra is a fast-paced and blackly comic portrait of 1930s America. O'Hara's debut novel introduced a prolific new voice to a generation and still stands as one of the great works of American fiction.
The bestselling novel that became an Oscar-winning film starring
Elizabeth Taylor about New York's speakeasy generation
Collected for the first time, the New York stories of John O'Hara,
"among the greatest short story writers in English, or in any other
language" (Brendan Gill, "Here at The New Yorker")
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