thuridaV, September 7, 1978 daily 'nebraskan 'Garp' trapped in comictragic life By David Wood The World According To Garp by John Irving, Dutton, $ 1 0 .9 5 John Irving's novels have all been" well received, in the past, if even by small fringe audiences. But now, with his fourth novel, the bestseller, The World According to Garp, Irving, at age 36, is at last taking a place among the dwindling number of critically notable American novel ists. The story is about a writer, which is a popular career nowadays for the protagonists of novels. T.S. Garp, like John Irving, is author to four books. The plots have clear ly been fashioned from his own experiences; but the stories are not, Garp contests about his personal life. book review "Memories and personal histories - all the recollected traumas of our unmemorable lives' - were suspicious models for fiction, Garp would say." Ordinary life And says Irving, harmoniously, in a Times interview, "I'm grateful for how ordinary my life is because I'm not ever tempted to think that something that happened to me is important simply because it happened to me." Yet, as if mocking their mutual conviction against "the phony mileage of personal hardship," the lives of Irving and Garp share even more than that. Alike in their age and the novels they have written, both are happily married, reside in small-town New England, each the father of two sons. Both have spent formative years in Vienna. John Irving is an ex-Olympic wrestler; Garp is a wrestling coach. So on and so forth. This does not make Garp the autobiography of Irv ing, however, because the book, craftily and artistically, is not about Garp; Garp is just the continuity. Rather, the portrait is of the world according to Garp. Bum luck Garp's is a world like ours, but that Garp has the bum luck of meeting the latent random hazard of living in it so often it becomes a current in his life's course. Murphy's Law is an exaggerated symbol of the world according to Garp; if something is to go wrong, it will, and at the worst time, i Garp's is an ordinary life. He is full of faults, and living among faulted humans. He experiences suburban trivi alities and illusions of importance. Yet he shares a Viennese awareness with Marcus Aurelius. "In the life of a man, his time is but a moment, his being an incessant flux, his sense a dim rushlight, his body a prey of worms, his sould an unquiet eddy, his fortune dark, his fame doubtful. In short, all that is body is as coursing waters, all that is of the soul as dreams and vapors" Snuffed out Garp's world is as a caricature of at least one man's vul nerability. And accentuated is the peril of living in our modern world, that in a moment's chaos or in a quirk of incidence can violently snuff out parts or all of him. Walt, Garp's son, misheard his father, when Garp warned him to be careful of the undertow in the ocean. Walt would sit on the shore looking for the creature he thought he had to look out for. The "underload" was for awhile a joke among the family. After an accident, though, the invisible monster stalked Garp's good family the rest of the book. A car wreck in which Walt was killed; another of Garp Garp's sons lost an eye; one of his wife's students had his penis bitten off; Garp lost his talent; the whacky timing, the unrealness of the unexpected and the realness of the loss, are written perfectly full-bodied with Irving's skill for black comic clarity of realism. We're all dead Yet if the moral is an exaggeration, what Irving calls "a truthful exaggeration", that "we are all terminal cases", so is everything in The World According to Garp exaggerated. It is Irving's charming craftsmanship, as much as anything, his muted exaggerations, his lucidly comic typicality, the guisiness of his phrases, that makes his book a delight to read . Says Irving of it, subtly, "I don't see comedy and trag edy as contradictions . . .1 don't see that unhappy endings undermine rich and energetic lives. There are no happy endings; death is horrible, final and frequently prema ture . . . That shouldn't strike anyone as a terribly new idea . . . New ideas aren't a novelist's business; I leave the new ideas to the clothing and automotive industries." FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH 13th & I Streets Catty Corner Northeast from the State Capitol YOUNG ADULT CLASS meets Sunday 9:30 a.m. Students invited to sing in CHANCEL CHOIR Rehearsals - Thursday at 7:30 p.m. We also have a ministry to married university students I SUNDAY WORSHIP 10:45 a.m. Dr. Edward H. Kolbe Pastor 6 11 r PROVEN OPPORTUNITY BE YOUR OWN BOSS WORK YOUR OWN HOURS WE ARE SEEKING AN EAGER SELF STARTER TO BECOME OUR REPRESENTATIVE IN THE CAMPUS AREA. CALL TOLL FREE FOR DETAILS 1-800-327-3665 CUSTOM MIN TED -SHIHJ ACTOY THOSE BEAR TRAPS! They never cease to amaze. And, Hov's has lots of new styles, with new shapes, to go with all those great fall looks. A: Wood bottom wedge in dark brown calf leather, $27. B: Wood bottom heel in black and antique brown, $35. Crepe sole wedge in antique brown leather, $34. Shoe Salon, all stores. ii -, J I hovland-swanson LINCOLN GRAND ISLAND OMAHA Lincoln's Quality Adult Theater Late shows Fri. & Sat. Continuous shows If 1 m from 11am. ... moo m a Rated XXX "SEX IN THE OZ ARKS" See what Happens when the city folk go to the! Ozarks! Rated XXX 11 I n Plus Second XXX .Rated Feature "MASQUERADE BALL" with John C. Holmes Must be 18- Have I. D 730 "O" St. 432-6042 KFMQ Radio & The Stuart Theatre ANOTHER OUTSTANDING SEASON OF MIDNIGHT MOVIE ENTERTAINMENT EVERY FRIDAY AT 12 MIDNIGHT Starting September 8, 1978 Admission $1.50 September 8 THE LAST WALTZ September 15 SHAMPOO September 22 SLAUGHTERHOUSE FIVE September 29 MONTY PYTHON & THE HOLY GRAIL October 6 & 7 Tommy (two days) October 6 THE TAXI DRIVER October 13 THE LONGEST YARD October 20 ALICE'S RESTAURANT Oct. 27 Taxi Driver November 3 LOOKING FOR MR. 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