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About this item
Highlights
- An aspiring author's lawsuit raises questions about family, inheritance, and the vagaries of the American legal system in this National Book Award-winning courtroom satire.
- National Book Awards (Fiction) 1994 1st Winner
- About the Author: William Thomas Gaddis, Jr. was a novelist and author of War Without Bloodshed, a Simon & Schuster book.
- 512 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Literary
Description
About the Book
With dazzling wit, William Gaddis brings his unmatched powers of observation and satirical sensibilities to bear on the American legal system. "A Frolic of His Own is a tour de force. It is a profound entertainment. It is scalding and Swiftian . . . darkly hilarious".--The New Republic. 1994 National Book Award winner.
Book Synopsis
An aspiring author's lawsuit raises questions about family, inheritance, and the vagaries of the American legal system in this National Book Award-winning courtroom satire.
Oscar Crease, part-time history professor and aspiring playwright, penned Once at Antietam, his magnum opus fictionalizing his grandfather's experiences during the Civil War. Despite his high hopes and sending copies of the play to everyone he could think of, Oscar failed to get it staged. But then a movie with the same title and other striking similarities comes out. Convinced they plagiarized his work, Oscar decides to sue the studio.
His hunger for recognition and justice is all-consuming, even as his financially dependent half-sister and her husband's lives get caught in the crossfire. As Oscar's lawsuit progresses at a painfully slow, bureaucratic pace, legal documents and transcripts are interspersed throughout the narrative, highlighting the exploitation present in both the legal system and Hollywood machine--as well as Oscar's determination to win despite the rising cost.
About the Author
William Thomas Gaddis, Jr. was a novelist and author of War Without Bloodshed, a Simon & Schuster book.