Tom McHale (novelist born 1941)

For the other American novelist, see Tom McHale (novelist born 1902).
Tom McHale
Born 1941
Avoca, Pennsylvania
Died March 30, 1982
Pembroke Pines, Florida
Occupation Novelist
Genre Satire, Black comedy
Notable works Principato,
Farragan's Retreat

Tom McHale (1941 – March 30, 1982) was an American novelist. His works include Principato, Farragan's Retreat (nominated for the National Book Award), Alinsky's Diamond, School Spirit, The Lady from Boston, and Dear Friends. He was born in Avoca, Pennsylvania and received an M.F.A. from the University of Iowa. He committed suicide in Florida in 1982.

Early life

Thomas "Tom" McHale was born in 1941 in Avoca, Pennsylvania located nine miles (15 km) southwest of Scranton. He was the eldest of six children from an Irish-Catholic family.[1] His family’s Irish-American ethnicity and Roman Catholicism would become prominent elements in his novels.[2]

He worked as a caseworker for the Department of Public Assistance in Philadelphia for a brief period.[2]

He attended Jesuit Catholic schools[3] including Scranton Preparatory (1955–1959)[4] and was a graduate of Temple University in the early 1960s.[2] He went on to earn a Master of Fine Arts from the University of Iowa Writers Workshop.

He originally planned to be a doctor and attended medical school but changed his mind and dropped out.[5]

Career

After the success of his first novel, Principato in 1972, McHale secured the position of writer-in-residence at Monmouth University in West Long Branch, New Jersey, a position he held until the end of his life.[2]

Shortly before his death he was rewarded with a teaching position at the University of Pennsylvania that was to commence in fall semester, September, 1983.[4]

McHale took an interest in writing early on, however, after attending a wedding in Israel in the late 1960s he decided to "give the writing monster inside me a chance and stayed there a year to see what I could do, to see if anything came up. I wrote a first novel. It was so bad that I tore it up into little pieces, took it out to the Negev Desert and threw it all over."[5]

Shortly after, he wrote a second novel and traveled to Paris, France where he shared it with the widow of novelist Richard Wright. She liked what she saw and the book was later published as Principato, McHale's first important work.[5]

By the 1970s he was one of the most promising American novelists of his generation. During a period of 12 years between 1970 and 1982, he produced six novels that received wide acclaim and positive reviews.[1]

In 1976, McHale noted that he "writes in longhand, then has his work transcribed by a typist he describes as 'marvelous', she actually knows the English language and corrects my spelling and punctuation."[5] He would spend an average of 18 months working on each novel but admitted that School Spirit only took him about seven months.[5] During that period he was living in Boston, Massachusetts and expressed that he would like to work on a movie script because next because "I'm terribly interested in film. It's such a vast medium, so many people can see a movie. A novel, however, is limited in its appeal."[5]

McHale described his work;

Parts of all of my novels are funny. But there's a tragi-comic sense to all of them. You can't deny the comedy, but neither can you deny the tragedy. It's there.[5]

By 1972, Paramount pictures was very enthused about McHale's first novel, Farragan's Retreat. They even hired screenwriter Ring Lardner, Jr. to turn the novel into a screenplay. This was during the time of Richard Nixon's election and Paramount eventually decided that the War in Vietnam was going to end soon. Because the book was about a young man who had gone to Canada to avoid the draft, the studio decided against using the story because they worried that by the time the film finally came out, the war would be over and the American public would have lost interest. As it turns out, Nixon prolonged the war, but by then Paramount had unfortunately moved on. Lardner mentioned several years later, in 1982, that he regretted that Paramount dropped the project because it was the screenplay he "liked the very best that never got made."[6]

Reception

Reviewers compared McHale's novels to those of Joseph Heller, Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., John Updike and Philip Roth because of his black comic humor. They also saw considerable talent in his quickly growing body of work.[1] A New York Times review in March, 1971 noted that "There are many young writers with healthy reserves of rags and chaos, some indeed with little else. What distinguishes McHale is not only the fertility of his invention but the humanity—remarkable in a writer of 28—that penetrates even his crudest characters.".[3]

An article in Life Magazine in 1971 went on to say that "McHale writes as if born to the craft. He imagines and schemes like a beery poet. He sees, pokes, probes. He tells fabulous jokes---McHale's capacity to trigger emotions ranges from laughter to compassion to cold horror. Realism, pathos, mystery, Tom McHale is not another new writer. He is himself."[7]

By 1976, a review from Associated Press gave much credit to the novel School Spirit for grappling with "questions that men have long pondered, questions such as the sanctity of life, guilt, punishment, redemption, but instead of creating what should have been a heavy philosophic text, he successfully produced a comic novel that makes the reader think, even as he laughs."[8]

Despite many good reviews, not all were favorable. In 1971 a scathing review of Farragan's Retreat noted that "this is an absurd book that started well. Now that this talented author has this novel out of his system, we can only hope that he'll live up to his potential."[9]

Personal life

McHale was married to Suzanne McHale and had homes in Kittery, Maine and Killington, Vermont.[2] McHale enjoyed working with masonry in his spare time. He started in his mid-twenties by building fieldstone walls and later built fireplaces. In 1976, he proudly talked about the home in Maine, 60 miles from Boston, that he was looking forward to the construction of that summer; "It'll give me a chance to do some physical work. Outside, I'll do the masonry work on the base of the house and inside, I'll do the fireplace."[5]

McHale committed suicide at age 40 at his sister’s home in Pembroke Pines, Florida.[10]

Bibliography

Unfinished works

Awards

In 1974, McHale was awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship for Fiction for Alinsky's Diamond.[1] He also received the Thomas More Association medal, an award given annually for the most distinguished contribution to Catholic Literature for his novel School Spirit in 1976.[11]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 Kich, Martin. "Tom McHale". The Literary Encyclopedia - June 20, 2003. Retrieved 2010-07-01.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 St. Amand, Matthew. "Tom McHale - Principato". Matthew St. Amand - 2010. Retrieved 2010-07-01.
  3. 3.0 3.1 "Books: Ring Around the Rosary". New York Times (New York, New York). March 1, 1971.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Grossman, Cathy Lynn (July 4, 1983). "Portrait of a Writer as a Young Suicide". Miami Herald (Miami, Florida).
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7 5.8 Thomas, Phil (May 9, 1976). "From Book to Brick". The Citizen Auburn (Auburn, New York).
  6. Kaplan, Lisa Faye (1982). "Ring Lardner, Jr.". Herald Statesman (Yonkers, New York).
  7. Schott, Webster (February 5, 1971). "A fusion of blasphemy and formality". LIFE (New York, New York: Time, Inc.). Retrieved May 30, 2010.
  8. "Book Reviews by AP". The Citizen; Associated Press (Auburn, New York). April 11, 1976.
  9. "Book Reviews". The Citizen-Advertiser (Auburn, New York). February 27, 1971.
  10. Grayson, Richard. "Tom McHale, novelist". Edward Champion's Reluctant Habits - May 23, 2007. Retrieved 2010-07-01.
  11. "Peeking into the past; 1977, 33 years ago". Pittston Dispatch (Pittston, Pennsylvania). March 1, 1971. Retrieved July 2, 2010.

External links