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    <id>142627</id>
    <name><![CDATA[Jason]]></name>
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  <id type="integer">406581</id>
  <isbn>0345417976</isbn>
  <isbn13>9780345417978</isbn13>
  <text_reviews_count type="integer">103</text_reviews_count>
  <title>
    <![CDATA[A Prayer for Owen Meany]]>
  </title>
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  <average_rating>4.06</average_rating>
  <ratings_count>618</ratings_count>
  <description>
    <![CDATA[Owen Meany is a dwarfish boy with a strange voice who accidentally kills his best friend's mom with a baseball and believes--accurately--that he is an instrument of God, to be redeemed by martyrdom. John Irving's novel, which inspired the 1998 Jim Carrey movie <em>Simon Birch</em>, is his most popular book in Britain, and perhaps the oddest Christian mystic novel since Flannery O'Connor's work. Irving fans will find much that is familiar: the New England prep-school-town setting, symbolic amputations of man and beast, the Garp-like unknown father of the narrator (Owen's orphaned best friend), the rough comedy. The scene of doltish the doltish headmaster driving a trashed VW down the school's marble staircase is a marvelous set piece. So are the Christmas pageants Owen stars in. But it's all, as <em>Highlights</em> magazine used to put it, &quot;fun with a purpose.&quot;  When Owen plays baby Jesus in the pageants, and glimpses a tombstone with his death date while enacting <em>A Christmas Carol</em>, the slapstick doesn't cancel the fact that he <em>was</em> born to be martyred. The book's countless subplots add up to a moral argument, specifically an indictment of American foreign policy--from Vietnam to the Contras. <p>  The book's mystic religiosity is steeped in Robertson Davies's Deptford trilogy, and the fatal baseball relates to the fatefully misdirected snowball in the first Deptford novel, <em>Fifth Business</em>. Tiny, symbolic Owen echoes the hero of Irving's teacher Günter Grass's <em>The Tin Drum</em>--the two characters share the same initials. A rollicking entertainment, <em>Owen Meany</em> is also a meditation on literature, history, and God. <em>--Tim Appelo</em></p>]]>
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    <id>3075</id>
        <name><![CDATA[John Irving]]></name>
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    <average_rating>3.86</average_rating>
    <ratings_count>130399</ratings_count>
    <text_reviews_count>8928</text_reviews_count>
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  </authors>  <published>1988</published>
</book>

    <rating>2</rating>
  <votes>15</votes>
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  <recommended_for><![CDATA[Jesus Christ]]></recommended_for>
  <recommended_by><![CDATA[]]></recommended_by>
  <read_at>Sun Jul 01 00:00:00 -0700 2007</read_at>
  <date_added>Fri Aug 10 11:14:43 -0700 2007</date_added>
  <date_updated>Thu Dec 17 04:38:31 -0800 2009</date_updated>
  <read_count></read_count>
    <body><![CDATA[I've been on a huge John Irving kick recently, and man, am I glad I didn't start with this book because I might have aborted the whole thing before I had a chance to read some of his better works.<br/><br/>This one just didn't do it for me. Whereas I left other Irving novels feeling recharged and ...<a href="http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/4366312">more...</a>]]></body>
    
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