Something Happened

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Something Happened
Author Joseph Heller
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Novel
Publisher Knopf
Released September 1974
Media Type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
ISBN ISBN 0-394-46568-7 (hardback edition)
Preceded by Catch-22
Followed by Good As Gold

Joseph Heller's second novel, Something Happened, appearing thirteen years after the publishing sensation Catch-22, turns the focus of the same jaundiced eye from life in the military to the work and home life of Corporate Man living the American Dream.

Something Happened is much darker than its more highly touted predecessor. While Catch-22 is a frenetically paced book with an omniscient narrator, the bulk of Something Happened is the deep, often repetitive, internal monologue of the narrator, Bob Slocum, who laments the passage of time, the departure of old friends and opportunities, the futility of his career, the stagnation of his marriage, and the impossibility of being a good parent. The book has a fair amount of humor: Slocum's character studies of those around him are conducted with sadistic glee, his self-analysis is wry and rueful, and his absurdist juxtapositions at times approach those of the narrator of Catch-22; but its predecessor's darkest moments set the emotional tone for most of the work.

[edit] Plot introduction

While, contrary to some reviews at the time, the book is not entirely without a plot — a major event does occur by the book's end, although the book's title refers more to the loss of optimism and hope — there is not much plot here. Rather, the novel invites the reader to an intimate embrace of the caustic self-criticism and psychic pain of what is objectively a highly successful narrator.

[edit] Literary significance & criticism

Something Happened did not match its predecessor's level of commercial success, though it was well-regarded by critics. In its moments of humor among unsparing honest, despairing stretches of self-evaluation, it recalls the great works of Anton Chekhov, and prefigures much later works such as the film American Beauty, but without allowing the reader/viewer ironic emotional distance. While it is not as recognized as its predecessor, it is a simultaneously bleak and engaging work. [citation needed]

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