"The plot of the novel, which is quite slight, is rather hard to tell, but it concerns a young man and his wife, members of the club set, and how the young man starts off the Christmas 1930 holidays by throwing a drink in the face of a man who has aided him financially. From then on I show how fear of retribution and the kind of life the young man has led and many other things contribute to his demise. There are quite a few other characters, some drawn from life, others imaginary, who figure in the novel, but the story is essentially the story of a young married couple in the first year of the depression". - John O'Hara
Appointment in Samarra is the eighth book I have read for the 2019 Back to the Classics Challenge (hosted by Karen K at Books and Chocolate) - choose a classic from the Americas or the Carribbean. Originally I had planned on reading A House for Mr. Biswas by the great writer V. S. Naipaul but 140 pages in I wasn't connecting with Mr. Biswas' story.
Appointment in Samarra has been on my radar since early this year when I read Will Schwalbe's very fine memoir The End of Your Life Book Club. The plot revolves around a reckless and impulsive act commited by a wealthy young man, Julian English. At a Christmas party he throws a drink into the face of another much wealthier and well connected man, Harry Reilly. Reilly has done nothing to warrant this behavior except that Julian is sick and tired of having to once again listen to one of Harry's rather boring stories.
And so what interested me about this novel is that we all live by certain norms. Sure we have fantasies for example of walking off our jobs in the middle of the day and never coming back but we don't do that because after the first hour or two of freedom comes the repurcussions. How will we be able to list the job on a resume after we pull a stunt like this? And so my curiousity regarding Appointment in Samarra was what happens after Julian so recklessly disregards the norms?
Harry Reilly is not someone to make an enemy of and Julian owes him alot of money. Plus Harry is socially well connected in Gibbsville PA where the novel is set. He has wealthy friends who have been frequenting Julian's Cadillac dealership but when the story about how Julian behaved at the party circulates around town Julian and his wife Caroline begin to lose standing in the community and eventually their financial well being would have taken a hit. I say eventually because we never get that far. The novel is set entirely over the 1930 holiday season, about three or four days. But in those three or four days we learn a great deal about Julian, his wife Caroline,, the snobbish social set they are a part of and Julian's father who Julian has always felt judged by but who in reality is worried about his son. All of this is leading towards tragedy and I was a bit suprised by the form it took, although I shouldn't have been since we are given clues.
Appointment in Samarra is a rather depressing book which touches on a number of themes. It's an interesting portrait of a marriage and O'Hara does a good job of letting us know who Julian and Caroline are, not simply as a couple but as individuals. Appointment in Samarra has been compared to the Great Gatsby and some critics actually prefer this novel. Having never read the Great Gatsby I can't judge. John O'Hara's biographer Frank McShane would later say that Appointment in Samarra written ten years after The Great Gatsby and set in 1930 is a novel that belongs to the "hangover generation". The young people who had a great time living through the jazz age when things were good but didn't build up their defenses when the Great Depression hit.
Appointment in Samarra is well written but I wouldn't say the writing is great and yet it is considered a classic so much so that Harold Bloom included this novel in his history of the Western Canon and Modern Library lists it as one of the 100 Best English Language Novels of the 20th Century. Book lists are very subjective though and so if you are curious you might want to give Appointment in Samarra a try and judge for yourself.
Congrats on finishing book #8 for the Back to the Classics Challenge! I'm not familiar with John O'Hara or any of his books, so it was interesting to read your review of this one. :)
ReplyDeleteThanks Lark. I was not familiar with John O'Hara's books either. Appointment in Samarra was his first novel and also his best. I didn't love the book and it is depressing but its well written and it does give you a real sense of what the early 1930's were like so its culturally relevant in that way.
DeleteThis book has been on my radar for awhile. The plot and characters sound fascinating. I had heard elsewhere that O’Hara’s prose was not the best. That is unfortunate considering the other positive things about this book.
ReplyDeleteI think that we have discussed this before, but I also consult Bloom’s Cannon for books.
Hi Brian, That's interesting that you have heard that about O'Hara's prose because I felt that way too as I read the novel. The writing is good but in my opinion it's not great and so I am puzzled by Appointment in Samarra's status as a classic and why some books are chosen for that honor and others are not. I would be curious too if the literary world ever prunes tbe classics list. Deciding that some books haven't held up well over the years and maybe shouldn't be considered classics anymore?
DeleteA House for Mr. Biswas is very slow and at times quite sad. I also found it rough going at times.
ReplyDeleteI read Appointment in Samarra a few years ago. I can’t say I liked it much, though how much that had to do with the unlikable Julian I can’t say. He was so hell bent on self-destruction. When I read it, I didn’t think of The Great Gatsby, I though of Main Street by Sinclair Lewis because in many ways Appointment in Samarra is an expose of small town hypocrisy. And maybe that is what Julian is really fighting against but he seemed to me to be as bad as the rest really. I was unclear about his motives other than that first impulsive act. Mabye the book is about how on can't outrun fate - as the title suggests - but the text really didn't support that in my opinion.
Hi Ruthiella, In reading Appointment in Samarra I think the key to Julian's fate was in what happened to his grandfather. Julian's father saw some of his own father's traits in his son back when Julian was young and arrested for shoplifting and Julian's later drinking and reckless behavior seemed to indicate that depression had skipped a generation.
ReplyDeleteIts a book that touches on important issues but I agree the characters not likeable and the writing I don't think rose to the level of some of the classics I've read.
Thanks for the review--the summary is excellent because this work has been on my TBR list since reading End of Your Life Book Club as well! I hadn't heard about the comparison to Great Gatsby, but I wonder at that because while the setting and themes may be similar, Fitzgerald's prose is sublime, his pacing is perfect, and his imagery is striking.
ReplyDeleteI like the thought of the Hangover generation--I think there is a lot of truth in that characterization.
Great post!
Thanks Jane, End of Your Life Book Club was certainly a resource for interesting books and a loving tribute by Will Schwalbe to his remarkable mother. I have not read the Great Gatsby but the writer Fran Lebowitz preferred Appointment in Samarra but I'm thinking Gatsby is the better novel because Fitzgerald's reputation as one of the great writers of the 20th century rests primarily on the Great Gatsby and and I definitely must read it.
ReplyDeleteGood review. I'm curious to discover what exactly happens to Julian as a result of his impulsive act.
ReplyDeleteThanks Liberty Belle. I don't want to spoil it for you should you decide to read the novel. But the ending of the book is a suprise.
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