Edwin O'Connor

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Edwin O'Connor


Born
in Providence, RI, The United States
July 29, 1918

Died
March 23, 1968

Genre


Edwin O'Connor was an American journalist, novelist, and radio commentator who won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1962 for his novel The Edge of Sadness (1961). His ancestry was Irish, and his novels concerned the Irish-American experience and often dealt with the lives of politicians and priests. ...more

Average rating: 3.97 · 3,741 ratings · 366 reviews · 31 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Edge of Sadness

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3.93 avg rating — 2,553 ratings — published 1961 — 36 editions
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The Last Hurrah

4.13 avg rating — 1,024 ratings — published 1956 — 37 editions
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All in the Family

3.81 avg rating — 84 ratings — published 1966 — 26 editions
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Benjy: A Ferocious Fairy Tale

3.83 avg rating — 23 ratings — published 1957 — 11 editions
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I Was Dancing.

3.65 avg rating — 23 ratings — published 1964 — 8 editions
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The Oracle

3.14 avg rating — 7 ratings — published 1956 — 4 editions
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The Last Hurrah / The Edge ...

4.33 avg rating — 3 ratings — published 1961 — 3 editions
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The Last Hurrah, The Edge o...

liked it 3.00 avg rating — 1 rating
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LA DERNIERE FANFARE

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings
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THE ORACLE

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More books by Edwin O'Connor…
Quotes by Edwin O'Connor  (?)
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“And while he spoke of my mother often and fondly to me, he always did so incompletely, in a strangely peripheral way, so that I grew up with a picture of her that was really little more than an outline. Was this unfair, an injustice to me? It must seem so, and I suppose in a way it was. And yet we all have within ourselves those private spaces that are uniquely our own and that we cannot share. This was my father's: the heart of his grief, which he chose not to expose. It was only now, in these last months before his death, that the outline was filled in, that without preliminary or explanation, my father suddenly began to talk of my mother as he had never talked before, in words and phrases lit with a bursting lyrical warmth and love that had been stored up and held within him all this time, and that was now released because, I think, he knew his own time was so short, and because he did not for a moment doubt that very soon now he would be joined to her again...

So there was a feeling of joy here.”
Edwin O'Connor, The Edge of Sadness

“There are, after all, certain social duties that a priest has toward his parishioners, and if that priest is as I was--energetic and gregarious, with an aptitude for such occasions--these duties and occasions have a way of multiplying. There's a great attraction to this: he's doing what he likes to do, and he can tell himself that it's all for the honor and glory of God. He believes this, quite sincerely, and he finds ample support for such belief: on all sides he's assured that he is doing the much-needed job of "waking up the parish." Which is not a hard thing for a young priest to hear; he may even see himself as stampeding souls to their salvation. What he may not see is that he stands in some danger of losing himself in the strangely engrossing business of simply "being busy"; gradually he may find that he is rather uncomfortable whenever he is not "being busy." And, gradually too, he may find fewer and fewer moments in which he can absent himself from activity, in which he can be alone, can be silent, can be still--in which he can reflect and pray. And since these are precisely the moments that are necessary for all of us, in which spiritually we grow, in which, so to speak, we maintain and enrich our connection with God, then the loss of such moments is grave and perilous. Particularly so for a priest--particularly for a priest who suddenly finds that he can talk more easily to a parish committee than he can to God. Something within him will have atrophied from disuse; something precious, something vital. It will have gone almost without his knowing it, but one day, in a great crisis, say, he will reach for it--and it will not be there. And then...then he may find that the distance between the poles is not so great a distance after all....”
Edwin O'Connor, The Edge of Sadness

“I've often thought that among all the afflicting sights of the world, none can be much more so than this one short walk along three city blocks, where night after night it's possible to see--indeed, it's impossible not to see--these faces from which hope and joy and dignity and light have been draining so steadily and for so long that now there is nothing left but this assortment of indifferent, damaged masks. They belong to human beings who, after a lifetime of struggling to become one thing or another, have succeeded only in becoming the rough sketches of their species, recognizable but empty, the bruised and wretched bodies and souls of the saddest people on earth: the people who no longer care.”
Edwin O'Connor, The Edge of Sadness

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