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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A glance backward through time
John O'Hara has been and remains one of the great secret treasures of 20th Century American literature. Period. Any reader who would comment "to read one story is to have read them all" would no doubt say the same of Faulkner, Hemingway or Fitzgerald.

O'Hara captures not only the voice of rural Pennsylvania circa 1910, but indeed recreates an entire new world based on...

Published on December 1, 2003 by John m Sugrue

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0 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars On Gibbsville compendium
More a collection than a selection, there is no uniformity in length, purpose o subject nor, surprisingly, in style.
Published on December 25, 2007 by J. de Berchoux


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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A glance backward through time, December 1, 2003
John O'Hara has been and remains one of the great secret treasures of 20th Century American literature. Period. Any reader who would comment "to read one story is to have read them all" would no doubt say the same of Faulkner, Hemingway or Fitzgerald.

O'Hara captures not only the voice of rural Pennsylvania circa 1910, but indeed recreates an entire new world based on his experiences in this place and time. As one who has walked the streets of Pottsville, Shamokin and Tamaqua I can assure you that echoes of O'Hara's Gibbsville still resinate throughout the region.

Discover O'Hara for yourself.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Quite a Collection!, February 28, 2009
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I am from O'Hara's Collieryville and can recall English / Literature teachers in high school saying: There's not a John O'Hara among the lot of you!

Well, who was/is John O'Hara, why should I care, and if he's so great why aren't we reading his stuff in class? All good questions with very good answers when you get into this collection which contains some first-class 'adult' themes which clearly kept John out of the school library!

This is a collection of short stories. One of my favorite genres. Sometimes the story is so short it can end in 17 or even fewer pages and be finished like the slam of a door or leave you wandering down your own 'what if' trails. Continuing some of these to 200+ would be a disservice to storyline and reader alike.

This collection is a great look at the Schuylkill County coal region during the period my grandparents grew up in and during the younger days of my parents. The argot is spot on if yiz know wut I mean.

The chararcters are human. Perhaps too human at times. The era is just after the Great War and into the Great Depression. It opens with a longish story set during the time of the Spanish Flu pandemic and is just too real at times. I can actually visualize many of the roads travelled, literally, and see the locales under discussion even if many of them were mostly ruins when I was younger. This helps bring alive the stories from many relatives as to what a 'swell place' this used to be to hang out.

I'm hooked. I'm looking for more O'Hara and plan to start on this guy called Updike. I advise you to join the reading party if you like true realism in literature from that period. It's better than F. Scott Fitzgerald IMO.
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Paperback trims third from hardcover collection, December 6, 2004
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Great collection -- a seamier Fitzgerald. If it's available used, consider the out-of-print 834 pg. hardcover, compiling more than 50 stories, instead of this 40-story, 500-page edition.
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11 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Our Greatest Writer, November 28, 1999
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This review is from: Gibbsville, Pa: The Classic Stories (Paperback)
If John O'Hara isn't one of our greatest American writers, who is? O'Hara, along with writers like John Cheever and Irwin Shaw, chronicle the American suburban experience during the middle part of the twentieth century and we should not miss out on their observations. But what do you see when you go to Barnes & Noble or Borders? Racks and racks of ridiculous drivel hoisted on us by greedy publishers and other fast-buck artists. Mindless entertainment rules while O'Hara, Cheever, Shaw and their like are pushed off the book shelves and out of circulation. The tone and empathy of these Masters will forever provide an insight into our American experience that you won't get from the trash that we now seem to be preoccupied with. OK, OK, OK. I read some of this current trash, too, but I haven't forgotten the great American Triumvirate.... O'Hara, Cheever and Shaw!
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5.0 out of 5 stars GReat Short Stories by John O'hara, February 3, 2010
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wheatsfriend (Excellenttown, PA usa) - See all my reviews
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Get the library edition if you can-the new version doesn't have all the stories. This is a great, huge collection of short stories by John O'hara. He describes the area of Eastern Pennsylvania especially Pennsylvania Dutch and Coal areas. His characters are amazing and he knows how to tell an interesting story-full of scandal and drama.
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0 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars On Gibbsville compendium, December 25, 2007
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J. de Berchoux (Rio de Janeiro, RJ Brazil) - See all my reviews
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More a collection than a selection, there is no uniformity in length, purpose o subject nor, surprisingly, in style.
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5 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars OK, April 14, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Gibbsville, Pa: The Classic Stories (Paperback)
If you've read one John O'Hara short story, you've read them all. All characters are obsessed with their status in life, and if a man and a woman are alone together, you just have to wait until one will try to get the other in the sack. If you had a 95 year old grandmother in a scene with an 18 year old male high school student, you could almost expect that one would make a pass at the other. THE DOCTOR'S SON is the best O'Hara short story I've read. It is excellent. Read that one, enjoy it. But you need read no more, since everything in that story is in every other O'Hara story.
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Gibbsville, Pa: The Classic Stories
Gibbsville, Pa: The Classic Stories by John O'Hara (Paperback - June 1994)
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