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- BOOKS, Page 80Doing Things His Way
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- "Maybe John Wheelwright should be in Stockholm," says John
- Irving, the former college wrestler who pinned the nation's
- attention in 1978 with The World According to Garp. Maybe, but
- Toronto turned out to be the perfect place. There one can be
- away but not away, close to home but not at home. The clean,
- well-lighted city on Lake Ontario is also where Irving, 47, met
- his second wife, literary agent Janet Turnbull. Irving and
- Turnbull were married in 1987, and maintain an apartment in
- Toronto's Forest Hill section. The author spends about a week
- each month north of the border, where there is no lack of
- literary companionship. Novelists Margaret Atwood and Robertson
- Davies are among his writing friends. Irving has two other
- homes, one in Vermont and the other from Vermont but in eastern
- Long Island. The wood-frame structure had been dismantled,
- transported to Long Island and restored among the summer
- retreats of the Northeast's most glamorous resort area. "I'm
- known as the eccentric bastard who moved to the Hamptons and
- brought his house with him," says Irving, a man who can take
- satisfaction in having done things his way.
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- In wider circles, Irving is known as a modern American
- Dickens. His novels are animated by victims of society who
- grapple with issues such as terrorism, rape and abortion. Owen
- Meany goes a step beyond. "I'm moved and impressed by people
- with a great deal of religious faith," says Irving, an
- Episcopalian who admits that the compulsory churchgoing of his
- youth has had a cumulative effect. But, he adds, "the Christ
- story impresses me in heroic, not religious, terms."
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- As for putting Owen Meany's dialogues in upper case? Irving
- got the idea from editions of the New Testament in which Jesus'
- utterances appear in red letters. And John Wheelwright's
- inability to forget the country of his birth? "Even if you try
- hard to look away from the U.S., it is there in your face like
- a flag."
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