Encyclopedia

John Henry OHara

The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

O’Hara, John Henry

 

Born Jan. 31, 1905, in Pottsville, Pa.; died Apr. 11, 1970, in Princeton, N.J. American writer. Son of a physician.

After graduating from high school, O’Hara worked as a reporter. In the novel Appointment in Samarra (1934) he depicted a rebellious philistine who was, however, incapable of carrying his opposition to bourgeois society to its ultimate conclusion. A touch of fatalism is inherent in many of O’Hara’s works. Typical of his prose, especially in the short stories, are dynamism, sharply delineated plots, a mastery of dialogue, and precise characterization (for example, the collections The Doctor’s Son, 1935; The Cape Cod Lighter, 1962; and Waiting for Winter, 1966). O’Hara’s heroes tormentedly and persistently seek a justification for the years they have spent in pursuit of superficial prosperity (the novels Butterfield 8 [1935] and A Rage to Live [1949; Russian translation, 1970]). The disintegration of a family and the degradation of energetic businessmen who lead amoral, deceitful lives are traced for several generations in the novel The Lock-wood Concern (1965; Russian translation, 1972). A man knowledgeable about provincial backwaters and steeped in the everyday life, mores, and spiritual baggage of the “average American,” O’Hara belonged to the realistic school in 20th-century American prose. He wrote a great deal for Hollywood.

WORKS

Selected Short Stories. New York, 1956.
Elizabeth Appleton. New York, 1963.
The Horse Knows the Way. New York, 1964.

REFERENCES

Allen, U. Traditsiia i mechta. Moscow, 1970. Pages 371–73.
Grebstein, S. N. John O’Hara. New York [1966].
Bruccoli, M. J. John O’Hara: A Checklist. New York [1972].

A. M. ZVEREV

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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