Review of West of Sunset from The Buffalo News

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By Michael Langan
News Book Reviewer

“West of Sunset” calls to mind the famous Hollywood boulevard. It also clarifies a brilliant writing life become brittle and bogus. It’s a biographical novel of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s (1896–1940) last three years. In it, Fitzgerald is in free-fall decline, fighting his addictions as he goes down hard.

The book begins in 1937, with Fitzgerald back in Hollywood for a third time. Sick, out of energy and funds, his wife Zelda in an asylum, their daughter Scottie away at school, he is struggling to make a new start as a screenwriter.

This is the starting point of American writer Stewart O’Nan’s 14th novel, and it’s a terrific read.

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Review of West of Sunset from Paste Magazine

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West of Sunset by Stewart O’Nan Review
By Steve Nathans-Kelly
Paste Magazine

Two familiar quotations from revered American author F. Scott Fitzgerald have come to define the writer’s final years, each in its way emblematic of Fitzgerald’s titanic talent and well documented decline:

There are no second acts in American lives.

I’ve left my capacity for hoping on the little roads that led to Zelda’s sanitarium.

The first quote, unearthed among Fitzgerald’s notes for his unfinished last novel,The Last Tycoon, typifies the problematic side of Fitzgerald’s virtuosic genius: insightful, eloquent, alchemically agile at transmuting the personal into the universal … and also a little bit sloppy. The generally accepted interpretation of this quote holds that Fitzgerald lamented something akin to a line sung by a relatively resurgent 60-year-old Bob Dylan: “You can always come back, but you can’t come back all the way.”

The problem with Fitzgerald’s “second acts” quote? In the world of Hollywood screenwriting where the author struggled in the last years of his life to script a return to literary glory, Fitzgerald’s life already approached the end of a devastating second act. Fitzgerald’s life lacked a third act: regeneration, redemption, resolution.

On the other hand, the second quote, conveyed in private correspondence, evokes with naked candor the irreversible dissipation of the last part of Fitzgerald’s life. Stewart O’Nan captures this final half-decade vividly in his new novel West of Sunset. O’Nan might accurately have subtitled it “The Hollywood Years.”

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Field of Fantasies: Baseball Stories of the Strange and Supernatural

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A Fantastic Anthology Combining the Love of Science Fiction with Our National Pastime

Of all the sports played across the globe, none has more curses and superstitions than baseball, America’s national pastime.

Field of Fantasies delves right into that superstition with short stories written by several key authors about baseball and the supernatural. Here you’ll encounter ghostly apparitions in the stands, a strangely charming vampire double-play combination, one fan who can call every shot and another who can see the past, a sad alternate-reality for the game’s most famous player, unlikely appearances on the field by famous personalities from Stephen Crane to Fidel Castro, a hilariously humble teenage phenom, and much more. In this wonderful anthology are stories from such award-winning writers as:

Stephen King and Stewart O’Nan (first U.S. print version of “A Face in the Crowd”)
Jack Kerouac
Karen Joy Fowler
Rod Serling
W. P. Kinsella
And many more!

Never has a book combined the incredible with great baseball fiction like Field of Fantasies. This wide-ranging collection reaches from some of the earliest classics from the pulp era and baseball’s golden age, all the way to material appearing here for the first time in a print edition. Whether you love the game or just great fiction, these stories will appeal to all, as the writers in this anthology bring great storytelling of the strange and supernatural to the plate, inning after inning.

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