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The Best of O. Henry by Na

kirstiecat's review against another edition

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5.0

This is definitely a great starting point for those interested in O. Henry. These stories really remind me a bit of Roald Dahl without all of the grimness but with some of the twisted endings crossed with the humanity element that Richard Yates provides. Most of them take place in NYC and focus on the issues of the people there and this collection in particular is worth looking at if you are a purist because the stories are published in the original submitted form vs. the post edited forms that have been most often popularized.


I don't know too much about O. Henry as a person except that he kept quite a low profile and was, at one time imprisoned. I also know that he did earn a decent salary for a writer in his day and did live to see some high acclaim, which many writers would have loved to have seen (ahem Edgar Allan Poe for example) But all of this seems well deserved.


To get to my point, however, is that usually throughout the course of several stories, you gain a real sense of the author as a person...O. Henry seems to adeptly obscure himself within so many varied characters dealing with so many different issues in life and from so many walks of life. It is almost as if he is able to overhear all of these stories or observe them happening around him and simply write them down. It really heightens the sense of realism and makes you forget that they are perhaps simple works of fiction. There's a story of John Cheever's I just finished reading a couple of days ago called The Enormous Radio (fantastic story, I might add) in which a couple purchases a radio and can hear the transmission of all conversations in their building over it instead of what they'd planned on hearing which includes the actual radio stations. In O. Henry's case, it's like he had an Enormous Radio to observe and hear all of NYC's aches and pains as well as joys and what comes out of this is a tremendous document that proves wholly worth reading.
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