You don't hear much about James T. Farrell anymore
The novelist and short-story writer known for his realistic portraits of the lower-middle-class Irish in Chicago, and best remembered for his Studs Lonigan trilogy
A consummate realist in viewpoint and method- who now will ever read the Danny O'Neill Pentalogy or the Bernard Carr trilogy
He wrote about people who were victims of injurious social circumstances and of their own spiritual and intellectual shortcomings
He depicted human frustration, ignorance, cruelty violence, and moral degeneration with a sober, relentless veracity
And he determined that he would write "regardless of the consequences."
"I have a lot of work to do," he said. "I write 20 hours at a stretch; I hate sleep and I fight it."
His sentences follow one another like bricks in a well made row.
His prose is simple and direct, powerful and blunt.
His courageous stance against Stalinism took a toll on his literary reputation, and later, as the naturalism he employed in his best fiction slipped out of vogue, his work fell into neglect and his star dimmed.