Synopses & Reviews
The National Book Awardwinning novel by the writer whom Fran Lebowitz called the real F. Scott Fitzgerald” Joe Chapin led a storybook life. A successful small-town lawyer with a beautiful wife, two over-achieving children, and aspirations to be president, he seemed to have it all. But as his daughter looks back on his life, a different man emerges: one in conflict with his ambitious and shrewish wife, terrified that the misdeeds of his children will dash his political dreams, and in love with a model half his age. With black wit and penetrating insight, Ten North Frederick stands with Richard Yates Revolutionary Road, Evan S. Connells Mr. Bridge and Mrs. Bridge, the stories of John Cheever, and Mad Men as a brilliant portrait of the personal and political hypocrisy of mid-century America.
Review
“If ever an author was ripe for a critical rebranding, its John OHara. . . . And
Ten North Frederick in particular seems deserving of a fresh readership. . . . In the wake of the 2008 crash and the social volatility it engendered . . . the great American fairytale of class mobility is poised to become, once again, the next frontier in American literature. In that respect, as in many others, John OHara, whose work and whose persona could not appear more old-fashioned on their surfaces, turns out to have been miles ahead of us.” —
Jonathan Dee, from the Introduction
“I have several friends who have been urging me to read John OHara for years. . . . This is the first John OHara novel I have read, and I cant wait to read more. . . . Ten North Frederick is, without a doubt, a brilliant book. . . . You cant put it down. . . . As I write this, I have just finished reading all 77 of the National Book Award fiction winners. Now Im going to read more John OHara.” —Harold Augenbraum, executive director of the National Book Foundation
“OHara remains one of Americas greatest social novelists of the twentieth century . . . He captured one of the most far-reaching social transformations in American history. . . . To read [his Pennsylvania] novels is to enter an entire world. They work on the reader with an unspectacular but cumulative power.” —The Atlantic
“[OHara] was as acute a social observer as Fitzgerald, as spare a stylist as Hemingway, and in his creation of Gibbsville, in western Pennsylvania, he invented a kind of small-bore variation on Faulkners Yoknapatawpha County.” —Los Angeles Times
“Politics, sex and social intercourse—the finest, most discerning and compassionate novel he has written—one of the most distinguished works of modern fiction.” —The New York Post
“An author I love is John OHara. . . . I think hes been forgotten by time, but for dialogue lovers, hes a goldmine of inspiration.” —Douglas Coupland, Shelf Awareness
“OHara occupies a unique position in our contemporary literature. . . . He is the only American writer to whom America presents itself as a social scene in the way it once presented itself to Henry James, or France to Proust.” —Lionel Trilling, The New York Times
About the Author
John O'Hara (1905-1970) was one of the most prominent American writers of the twentieth century. Championed by Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and Dorothy Parker, he wrote seventeen novels, including Appointment in Samarra, his first, BUtterfield 8, which was made into a film starring Elizabeth Taylor, and Ten North Frederick, which won the National Book Award, and he had more stories published in the New Yorker than anyone in the history of the magazine. Born in Pottsville, Pennsylvania, he lived for many years in New York and in Princeton, New Jersey, where he died. Jonathan Dee is the author of six novels, including the Pulitzer Prize finalist The Privileges. He is a contributing writer for the New York Times Magazine, a National Magazine Award-nominated literary critic for Harper's Magazine, and the recipient of fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Guggenheim Foundation.