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TIME: Almanac 1993
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TIME Almanac 1993.iso
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040389
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04038900.058
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1992-09-23
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BOOKS, Page 80Doing Things His Way
"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.
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."
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."