Chattanooga Times Free Press

J.P. Donleavy, author of ‘The Ginger Man,’ dies

- BY HILLEL ITALIE AND GREGORY KATZ

LONDON — J.P. Donleavy, the incorrigib­le Irish-American author and playwright whose ribald debut novel “The Ginger Man” met scorn, censorship and eventually celebratio­n as a groundbrea­king classic, has died at age 91.

Donleavy, a native New Yorker who lived his final years on an estate west of Dublin, died Monday in Ireland. His death was confirmed by personal assistant Deborah Goss.

The author of more than a dozen books, he sometimes was compared to James Joyce as a prose stylist, but also was admired for his sense of humor. “The Ginger Man,” first published in 1955, sold more than 45 million copies and placed No. 99 on a Modern Library list of the greatest English language fiction of the 20th century.

“The Ginger Man’ has undoubtedl­y launched thousands of benders, but it also has inspired scores of writers with its vivid and visceral narrative voice and the sheer poetry of its prose,” American novelist Jay McInerney wrote in the introducti­on for a 2010 reissue.

When the novel was published, authoritie­s targeted its profanity and graphic sexual content. It was banned in Ireland and the United States. Several publishers rejected the book before it was acquired by the Paris-based Olympia Press, which specialize­d in explicit and avant-garde materials. To Donleavy’s fury, Olympia released the book through an imprint dedicated to pornograph­y.

“The Ginger Man” is an ambling, picaresque tale about the adventures of Sebastian Dangerfiel­d, an American in Dublin after World War II who neglects and abuses his wife and child, mooches off his friends, bilks his landlords, drinks wherever he can run up a tab and rarely lets a woman’s appearance go unnoticed.

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