![]() ![]() Look at the plot: a remarkable, albeit outspoken woman (Garp’s mother, Jenny Fields) is killed by a lunatic male who hates women Garp himself is assassinated by a lunatic female who hates men.” But when Irving asked his then-twelve-year-old son, Colin, to read Garp in manuscript form, the boy saw the book completely differently. ![]() ![]() In his new foreword to the fortieth-anniversary edition of the book, Irving writes that back in 1977, he thought the novel was about “the polarization of the sexes … the story was about men and women growing further apart. In rereading the novel recently, I wasn’t surprised that these themes had struck me so deeply, though Garp is about so much else as well. It was my first exposure to an openly trans character and an openly asexual and aromantic character in fiction, the first book I read that explicitly discussed feminism and confronted toxic masculinity head on (though it didn’t call it that and, in my first reading, I didn’t, either). I had thought, mistakenly, that I’d first read it in high school, but regardless, it had made an impression on me. ![]() According to my Goodreads page, the first time I read The World According to Garp, by John Irving, was after my first year of college. ![]()
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