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John O’Hara (Censorship (Ready Reference series))
Author Profile
O’Hara’s first novel, Appointment in Samarra (1934), was praised by many reviewers but castigated by others for its sexual outspokenness. Because the novel’s setting, “Gibbsville,” was clearly modeled on O’Hara’s hometown of Pottsville, Pennsylvania, O’Hara was also criticized by his former neighbors for presenting the town in an unflattering light. The book was subsequently declared unmailable by the U.S. Post Office, although it continued to be sold openly in bookstores.
O’Hara’s Ten North Frederick (1955) drew more...
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- John O’Hara (Magill’s Survey of American Literature, Revised Edition)
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- John O’Hara (Critical Survey of Short Fiction)
See Also
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Appointment in Samarra (Masterplots Classics) -
Appointment in Samarra (Magill Book Reviews) -
Appointment in Samarra (Character Profiles) -
Appointment in Samarra (Literary Places) -
Doctor’s Son, The (Short Stories) -
From the Terrace (American Fiction) -
From the Terrace (Character Profiles) -
Ten North Frederick (American Fiction) -
Ten North Frederick (Character Profiles) -
Theory of Short Fiction (Topical Overview--Short Fiction)
