
The Imaginary Girlfriend
John Irving
From a novelist known for the complexity of his novels - they are also long - comes an autobiography of compelling simplicity; it is also short. Dedicated to the memory of two wrestling coaches and two writer friends, The Imaginary Girlfriend is a lucid portrait of the writers and wrestlers who played a mentor role in John Irving's development as a novelist, a wrestler and a wrestling coach. Moreover, this candid memoir portrays a father's dedication to his children: Irving coached his sons Colin and Brendan to New England championship titles - a championship that, as a competitor, he himself was denied.
John Irving began writing and wrestling when he was fourteen. He competed as a wrestler for twenty years, he was certified as a referee for twenty-four and he coached the sport until he was forty-seven. His thirty-three years in wrestling are three times those he spent as a student and a teacher of Creative Writing; yet his concise autobiography details the interrelationship of the disciplines of writing and wrestling - from the days when Irving was a beginner at both pursuits until his fourth wrestling-related surgery at the age of fifty-three.
The Imaginary Girlfriend is both a work of the utmost literary accomplishment and a paradigm for living.
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About John Irving
Reviews for The Imaginary Girlfriend
Michael Moran
Literary Review
His "inexpressible personal opinions" as a critic are wonderful, slaying many a sacred cow
Tobias Jones
Spectator
The patent sincerity of his passion gives an appealing authenticity to this memoir... compelling and alive
Andrew Rosenheim
The Times Literary Supplement
Irving can transform sex and violence mythology with the best of 'em
Adrianne Blue
Independent on Sunday
Concise, original and enjoyable
The Times