In One Person
IN PRINT / John Irving's smart new novel, at the intersection of sexuality and gender
Matt Mills / National / Tuesday, May 01, 2012
http://www.xtra.ca/public/National/In_One_Person-11918.aspxNovelist John Irving became a household name with his 1978 novel, The World According to Garp. He solidified that success with A Prayer for Owen Meany, The Hotel New Hampshire, The Cider House Rules and many others. He has, for those works, conjured characters of variously ambiguous gender and sexuality, but he's never published a novel in which sexual outlaws and the glorious sexual and gender differences among people are centrally featured. He's never published a truly queer story; that is, until now. His 13th novel, In One Person, due out on May 8, is just that.
Readers first meet protagonist Billy Abbott in 1955, when he is a 13-year-old budding writer and sexual being who finds himself almost overwhelmingly attracted to his librarian Miss Frost, an older, transgender woman. When asked by Miss Frost what sort of stories he would most like to read, Billy replies, "Do you know any novels about young people who have dangerous crushes, crushes on the wrong people?"
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In One Person – review
An aspiring novelist struggles to come to terms with his sexuality in John Irving's memorable hymn to individuality
Tim Adams
guardian.co.uk, Friday 4 May 2012 06.22 EDT
http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2012/may/04/john-irving-one-person-reviewIt has always seemed appropriate that John Irving is the only great contemporary novelist to have been inducted into the National Wrestling Hall of Fame. He goes about his writing much as you imagine he used to go about his former life as a college grappling champion and subsequent obsessive hobby as a coach. Subjects are faced down, language approached with muscular intent and no little adrenaline, and the whole eventually coerced into satisfying submission. It's not a criticism to say that he is the kind of novelist who carefully measures up a character from every angle and knows every trick in the book; the thrill of his books is the way he sets about establishing complex individuals who generally come out fighting.
[...]
That sense of a lost golden time inflects Billy's reminiscensces as he looks back on his life from the vantage of 65-year-old literary notoriety. What begins as a kind of coming-of-age memoir, in which he learns to be himself in the company of drag queens and transsexuals, in the bath houses of New York and opera houses of Vienna, becomes something far darker as Aids begins to destroy this likable masquerade in the early 1980s. Irving details the shift with candour; having spent half a life in beds rarely his own, Billy now sits at bedsides and has sad conversations with living corpses, lovers he used to know.
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Two Men Talking: Edmund White & John Irving
5.4.2012
By Edmund White and John Irving
http://www.out.com/entertainment/art-books/2012/05/04/edmund-white-john-irving-One-Person-jack-holmesThe novelists Edmund White, 72, and John Irving, 70, might not seem an obvious match, but their decades-long friendship is rooted in a shared interest in challenging America's puritanical attitudes. In one book after another, these literary lions have explored sexuality and identity in ways that challenge readers to examine their own prejudices.
White's debut, Forgetting Elena -- a mystery set on an island that thrums with Fire Island's all-too-familiar rituals -- was published in 1973. But it was his 1982 novel, A Boy's Own Story, that cemented his place as America's preeminent chronicler of the gay experience. His latest, Jack Holmes & His Friend, was published in January.
For Irving, international success arrived in 1978 with The World According to Garp, now published as a Modern Library edition, along with three of his other celebrated works -- The Cider House Rules, A Prayer for Owen Meany, and A Widow for One Year. His latest, In One Person, tells the story of a bisexual man attracted to men, women, and transgender women. Here, the two men discuss sex, gender, and why breasts separate gay men from straight.
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'In One Person' by John Irving
By Brock Clarke
May 06, 2012
http://www.greenhorizon-online.com/index.php/Insight/unwelcome-aboard.html"In One Person" has many of the things that one expects from a John Irving novel: It is set, mostly, in northern New England (in the fictional town of First Sister, Vt.); its protagonist is a novelist (as was true in 1978's "The World According to Garp" — a book I loved, and the book "In One Person" most closely resembles in its themes, if not always in prose style). There are no bears, but there are wrestlers and a prep school. German is taught and spoken, and Austria is visited. There are big questions about the narrator and novelist Billy Abbot's father, who has been more or less absent since Billy's birth. There's lots of sexual awakening and questioning and questing, lots of gender bending, lots of sex.
I know this list sounds dismissive, but I don't mean it to be. Sometimes Irving seems haunted by his obsessions, and sometimes he seems merely fond of them, but in any case, they clearly matter to him. These obsessions might be familiar to devoted (or even casual) Irving readers, but that does not necessarily mean they are tired.