A Prayer for Owen Meany

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A Prayer for Owen Meany
Prayer for Owen Meany cover
Author John Irving
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Novel
Publisher William Morrow
Released March 1989
Media Type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages 640 p. (paperback edition)
ISBN ISBN 0-688-08760-4 (hardback edition) & ISBN 0-552-99369-7 (paperback edition)

A Prayer for Owen Meany is a novel by American writer John Irving, first published in 1989.

[edit] Plot summary

The novel is told through the eyes of an older, matured John Wheelwright who elaborates on the events surrounding his teenage friendship during the 1950s and 1960s with Owen Meany, whom John credits as being the reason he believes in God. Owen is disproportionately short and his voicebox is fixed so that he sounds as if he is always screaming. Owen's short stature makes him the butt of many jokes and pranks but not in a typical bullying manner. Children and adults alike seem drawn to Owen, almost protective of him. Owen is also the recipient of many special privileges, such as getting to play the baby Jesus in a Christmas pageant because he is the only actor who can fit in the crib and not cry.

The novel deals with several lofty spiritual issues, such as the importance of faith, social justice, and fate. John and Owen both offer criticisms of some aspects of organized religion and the hypocrisy of some religious people throughout the novel. The spiritual dimension is also emphasized by Owen's repeated foretelling of his own impending death. He is quite certain that his death will be the result of his being an "instrument of God", that his death will serve some good purpose. He even believes that he knows the date of his death, and that an heroic act on his part will kill him, but also save some children. He is a bit unclear, however, about where it will happen.

The narrative is constructed as the interweaving of three different stories of the interwoven lives of John and Owen. There is the historical retelling of John and Owen's childhood, the story of their (and particularly Owen's) adult life and the story of John's life after Owen's death. The three streams are brought together at the denoument - the death of Owen. Owen always predicted both the manner and the importance of his own death.

The familiar Irving setting of a New England school sets this in the framework of his other works. However, other familiar Irving themes and settings (e.g. prostitutes, wrestling, Vienna, and sexual relationships between young men and older women) are missing, or mentioned only briefly.

Young John is skeptical of Owen's unquestioned belief in the purpose of all things for several reasons, namely, his mother's premature death (as the result of the impact of a baseball hit by Owen), and his mother's failure ever to disclose his father's identity. John is depicted as being spiritually apathetic as a youth, but the conclusion brings these spiritual pieces of the story together. Since the novel is written retrospectively, much of the novel takes the tone of John's newfound wisdom.

John occasionally withdraws from the past to offer criticisms of the Vietnam War and Iran-Contra scandal.

The setting is based on Phillips Exeter Academy, in Exeter, NH.

[edit] Allusions/references in other works

Californian punk rock band Lagwagon has one song based upon A Prayer for Owen Meany, called "Owen Meaney", on their 1998 album Let's Talk About Feelings.

Also, Jimmy Eat World has a song based upon the book, called "Goodbye, Sky Harbor", on their 1999 album Clarity.

[edit] Film, TV or theatrical adaptations

The 1998 feature-length film Simon Birch, directed by Mark Steven Johnson, was loosely based on the novel. The film starred Ian Michael Smith, Joseph Mazzello, Ashley Judd, Oliver Platt and Jim Carrey. It omitted much of the latter half of the novel and altered the ending. The movie does not share the book's title at Irving's request; he did not believe that this novel could successfully be made into a film.

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