Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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98 of 109 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
"Book-drunk boys" and serious writers., December 16, 2003
As a literature student at Arizona State University nearly twenty-five years ago, I was like one the "book-drunk boys" of Wolff's first novel, OLD SCHOOL, and "Toby" Wolff was my writing instructor. As a teacher, Wolff not only encouraged us to read important writers--Checkhov, Faulkner, Hemingway, Joyce, Fitzgerald--to improve our writing, but he also inspired us with his notion that "one could not live in a world without stories" (p. 131). Fiction, he said, takes us out of ourselves and into other lives. In OLD SCHOOL, Wolff demonstrates his talent for practicing what he teaches.OLD SCHOOL is written in the form of a fictionalized memoir. Set in the 1960s, Wolff's novel is about a single academic year at an all-male East Coast prep school, in which the narrator and his book-obsessed classmates compete for a private audience with visiting writers, Robert Frost, Ayn Rand, and Ernest Hemingway by writing poetry and stories. Not surprisingly, Wolff's narrator tries to improve his odds by immersing himself in Ayn Rand's FOUNTAINHEAD (which he reads four times) and Hemingway's short stories. In their shameless attempts to win the writing competition, the boys adopt their literary heroes' writing styles. The results reveal that phoney writing can be quite funny. OLD SCHOOL is not only about immersing oneself in important literature, but it is also about the honesty and self-awareness required to write important literature. In his novel, Wolff employs Frost, Rand, and Hemingway as characters to illustrate his point: although each of these writers is something of a phony in person, each is nevertheless capable of creating something authentic in their writing. OLD SCHOOL may be read as a study of this paradox, and what it means to be a serious writer like Tobias Wolff. G. Merritt
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45 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
"I'd seen my own life laid bare on the page.", November 4, 2003
In this homage to literature, the literary life, and the power of literature to influence a reader's life, Tobias Wolff focuses his attention on a small New England prep school in 1960, a school in which students live and breathe "the writing life." The headmaster has studied with Robert Frost, and the Dean is thought to have been a friend of Ernest Hemingway during World War I. To the boys, the English Department is "a kind of chivalric order," where they practice the "ritual swordplay of their speech."
For these students, the highlights of the school year are the three-times-a-year appearances of literary luminaries. When a writer visits, one boy has the opportunity to have a private audience with him, an honor for which the boys contend in vigorously competitive writing contests. The speaker/narrator, a scholarship student, is desperate to win an audience: "My aspirations were mystical," he says. "I wanted to receive the laying on of hands that had written living stories and poems." As various writers--Robert Frost, Ayn Rand, and finally, everyone's idol, Ernest Hemingway--are scheduled to appear at the school, the reader observes the growth of the boys, especially the speaker, as they are influenced by and react to the contest, to each other, to the visiting writers, and to the writers' speeches. In the contest to meet Hemingway, the novel reaches its peak, and in a shocking way, the speaker's life changes forever.
Wolff's novel is most remarkable for its point of view and for its conciseness. We never know what the speaker looks like or even his name, since it is through his eyes that the entire novel is filtered. He is interested in poems and short stories and philosophy and writing, all of which he talks about in detail, not in the observation of his surroundings. The limited setting of a New England prep school expands as the speaker ages and moves from school to the crueler outside world, and in later chapters, in which we see him as a mature writer, we also see how he uses some of his school experiences in his fiction, some of which appears within this novel.
Old School is a novel which students of writing will treasure--for its revelations of what it means to be a writer, its insights into the thinking of a perceptive teenager who is both idealistic and pragmatic, its irony, and its remarkable narrative voice. The themes are beautifully realized, and not one word is wasted or rings false. Though Wolff says that "No true account can be given of how or why you become a writer," he comes as close here to illustrating that process as in any other novel I've ever read about the writing life. Mary Whipple
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
slimly wonderful, July 25, 2004
Old School is a small, quietly wonderful book that will not have you on the edge of your seat, laughing out loud, or questioning various societal roles and rules. What it will do is captivate you in its spare fashion, surround you with a shared sense of love for literature, recall to you your poignant coming-of-age moments, fear, conflicts.
Set at an all boy elite prep school and centering on a young character who has manage to hide that he is middle-class and Jewish, the book centers on the annual writing contest where the winner gets to meet the invited writer of merit personally. during these years, the visiting writers are Ayn Rand, Hemingway (who doesn't actually appear), and Robert Frost. The competition is fierce and sparks some questionable acts, all of which are recalled in later years by the narrator. While he and his friends, along with the adult characters (the dean, some teachers, a teacher's wife), are sparsely drawn, the few details are so rich that the book suffers not at all. Rand and Frost make strong guest appearances as characters, captured brilliantly and humorously. Even better perhaps than the characters is their writing--Wolff does a wonderful job of capturing/parodying the adolescent writer and the way in which they tend to mimic established ones--all with a sense of sincerity rather than mockery.
The book is more than a love affair with literature, it delves in its few pages into concepts of honesty, of redemption, of friendship and identity, of shame and healing. But to be honest, even when these themes cropped up, moving as they were, well-handled as they were, they paled in comparison to Wolff's description of boys drinking literature like water and agonizing over writing like an early love affair.
It's a quick read, but one that should be lingered over. Don't toss it down in an afternoon though you could. Spend some time with it, reread some of the better sections, take some trips down memory lane yourself. Strongly recommended.
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