Skip to content

Nights and Weekends

Reviews of movies, books, music, and board games

Primary Menu
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Pin Posts
  • Privacy
  • Home
  • Prayer for Owen Meany
  • Telling Stories

Prayer for Owen Meany

debl December 17, 2002
0 0
Read Time:2 Minute, 21 Second

My decade-old mass-market copy of this novel was just about to bite the dust,
so I was quite glad that this year (2002) they came out with a new Modern Library hardcover
commemorating this recent classic. I of course had to break in my new copy,
so I re-read it…again. And once again, I enjoyed it thoroughly.

This is, in my opinion, John Irving’s best book. It’s very quirky,
but seems to be the least off-the-wall of his stories, and has the best characters.
The story’s narrator, John Wheelwright, tells the story from the viewpoint
of1987, looking back on his best friend, Owen Meany. Owen was very small (not
even five feet when he was fully grown), and had a “wrecked voice”—that
is, his voice was fixed in a permanent scream (Irving represents all Owen’s
dialogue in ALL CAPS). But these weren’t the most distinctive things about
Owen. The most distinctive thing was his unusual Christian faith—a faith
that he was GOD’S INSTRUMENT. It’s Owen’s faith that John credits
as the cause of his own eventual faith.

This book is hilarious at times—the (quite unorthodox) Christmas pageant
scene, in which Owen plays the Christ child (and makes it into a speaking role)
is alone worth reading it for, which is why it’s great to read around Christmas.
But since the book covers about forty years (it’s quite Dickensian in that
way), there’s no need to only read it at Christmas, and humor is definitely
not the only emotion this well-crafted novel evokes. As for themes, it’s
about finding family (Owen helps John in the search of his real father); it’s
about baseball (especially a certain fated game that caused the characters to
wince at the crack of a bat thereafter); it’s about American politics (and
the Vietnam war); and it’s about faith and doubt and miracles (and the
unlikeliest of God’s instruments).

If any of this sounds vaguely familiar, the movie Simon Birch was loosely
based on A Prayer for Owen Meany, but so loosely that the movie doesn’t
bear the same name. And rightly so—they changed major parts of the plot
and characterization for the movie version. For instance, the movie had nothing
to do with the Vietnam war, though it’s a major theme in the book.

Interested in John Irving? Read Kristin’s
review
of A Son of the Circus. Interested in humorous novels about the Vietnam
era and baseball? Read my
review
of another one of my favorites, The Brothers K by David James Duncan.

Share

Facebook
Twitter
Pinterest
LinkedIn

About Post Author

debl

debleiter@purdue.edu
http://deborahleiter.blogspot.com/
Happy
Happy
0 0 %
Sad
Sad
0 0 %
Excited
Excited
0 0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 0 %
Angry
Angry
0 0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 0 %

debl

See author's posts

Continue Reading

Previous: Murder on the Orient Express
Next: To Say Nothing of the Dog

Related Stories

Sway with Me
  • Chick Lit
  • COVER TO COVER
  • Kiddie Lit
  • Telling Stories

Sway with Me

November 30, 2021
Christmas by the Book
  • COVER TO COVER
  • Telling Stories

Christmas by the Book

November 9, 2021
Not If I Save You First
  • Telling Stories

Not If I Save You First

August 21, 2018

Categories

Archives

Meta

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

You may have missed

Road to Perth
  • Melodrama
  • ON FILM

Road to Perth

January 7, 2022
American Siege
  • Cardiac Corner
  • Melodrama
  • ON FILM

American Siege

January 7, 2022
Good as Gold (Whatever After #14)
  • COVER TO COVER
  • Kiddie Lit
  • Listen In...

Good as Gold (Whatever After #14)

January 4, 2022
Just Haven’t Met You Yet
  • Chick Lit
  • COVER TO COVER

Just Haven’t Met You Yet

December 28, 2021

Pages

  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Pin Posts
  • Privacy
Copyright © All rights reserved. | MoreNews by AF themes.