Author picture

Edward J. O'Brien (1890–1941)

Author of 50 Best American Short Stories 1915-1939

64+ Works 386 Members 6 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Series

Works by Edward J. O'Brien

50 Best American Short Stories 1915-1939 (2013) — Editor — 31 copies
The Best British Short Stories of 1922 (2004) — Editor — 23 copies, 1 review
The Best British Short Stories of 1923 (1923) — Editor — 9 copies
Modern English Short Stories (1930) — Editor — 7 copies
Inferences during Reading (2015) 6 copies
Elizabethan tales (1937) — Editor — 6 copies
The Great Modern English Stories: An Anthology (1919) — Editor — 5 copies
The Masque of Poets (2019) 3 copies
New English short stories — Editor — 1 copy

Associated Works

Hell (1908) — Translator, some editions — 518 copies, 13 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
O'Brien, Edward Joseph Harrington
Birthdate
1890
Date of death
1941
Gender
male
Occupations
author
poet
editor
anthologist
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

7 reviews
1924. I'm going to go story by story so I don't forget. At least that's the plan; we'll see how far I get.
"Champlin" by Morgan Burke is a rollicking men's adventure tale. Americans sail to the far East. There is romance, fighting, bars, exotic island women, and an excellent twist at the end. Unfortunately as was common at the time the term Chink is used for Chinese once.
"Billy" by Mildred Cram is a tale of a silent movie star modeled after Charlie Chaplin. He gets tired of being famous, show more because he can't get any peace. People recognize him wherever he goes. He goes away to an island where there are some natives who will never have heard of him. The he puts himself to the ultimate test: to see if he can make them laugh. Very good story. Speaks to the problems of fame today well, even without the TV, the cell phones and the internet.
"Phantom Adventure" by Floyd Dell might have been a little shocking in the 20s. It deals with adultery in an artful way. The hero settled down to a conventional life, with a good job, a wife and kids, but he had always longed for adventure. One night as he's wistfully mooning around wishing for an adventure he thinks he can never have, he opens the garden gate and chances upon a girl and has an affair. A one night stand really. At first he thinks he'll have to tell his wife, but then after all he reasons, how different is it from reading about it in a story. So he pretends it was just a story he read somewhere. He even tells it to an author friend [Floyd Dell?] who writes it up for him. Clever but unshocking by today's standards.
"The Cracked Teapot" by Charles Caldwell Dobie is about a swindler. He's seems like he used to cheating just about everyone he meets, but on this one occasion, he develops a bit of a conscience, and takes the short con instead of the long con on account of it. So cleverly told, I feel like the author himself must have been able to con anyone out of anything.
"The Last Dive" by Carlos Drake is about a man who dives from a high platform into a tiny tank of water for a living. It is a brief few minutes of what he is thinking just before and during his dive. Very suspenseful.
"Adventures of Andrew Lang" by Charles J. Finger is a dramatic adventure story of an unscrupulous fortune seeker/conman from the perspective of one of his many victims. It was remarkable for the sheer amount of adventure and unscrupulousness packed into this story.
"The Biography of Blade" by Zona Gale was about a brief moment in the life of a married man when he thought he might chuck his family and change his life, but it passes, with but little changing. It is about bridled passion. It seemed very realistic in it's romance, at least to a romantic soul, like me.
"Corputt" by Tupper Greenwald is a story about some academics. An English teacher goes back to see his old mentor, the Corputt of the title, and finds him lost in a particularly English-professorial senility. Didn't do much for me. Might be good if you're big into Shakespeare.
show less
This is a fascinating collection of short stories, in that it includes several iconic short stories that had appeared for the first time in 1931, and were therefore being anthologized for the first time.

The most famous stories included are "That Evening Sun Go Down" by Faulkner, "Babylon Revisited" by Fitzgerald, "Here We Are" by Dorothy Parker, "Rest Cure" by Kay Boyle and "Only We Are Barren" by Alvah Bessie. Other well known authors include Louis Bromfield, Erskine Caldwell, William show more March and Don Marquis. (I have to admit that I skipped "Babylon Revisited." I just couldn't face it one more time.)

There were also many excellent stories by writers I'd never heard of. "Fiddlers of Moon Mountain" by Emmett Gowen and "White Man's Town" by Lowry Charles Wimberly are two that stand out.

Also quite interesting was editor Edward O'Brien's introduction, which included his summary of the current (in 1931) state of the short story form:

"John Chamberlain, in the course of a stimulating and acute article in The New Republic entitled "The Short Story Muddles On," . . . . pointed out with considerable justice that many of the writers whose work I printed last year appeared to have evolved a behavioristic system because they had been influenced not quite logically by Ernest Hemingway. . . .

Behaviorism as a substitute for a philosophy of life is certainly rife in America. It is in the air which every American short story writer is compelled to breathe. It does not enter, however, into Ernest Hemingway's philosophy of life, and the writers who have been most influenced by him have largely nullified any beneficent influence which Mr. Hemingway might have had upon their work by imposing behaviorism upon his vision of life. . . . Despite behaviorism, I am nevertheless compelled to affirm once more that the period of literary integration has begun. This integration is neither specially philosophical nor specially psychological, and it certainly has nothing to do one way or the other with ethics. The integration of which I am speaking is characterized by a general sense of wholeness. A story tends to start clean, to discard irrelevancies, to see lucidly, to allow no falsities, to rub in no morals, to discover and reveal life The old pretentiousness is gone. The false sentiment is gone. The "hard-boiled" mask is gone. . . .

The short story is just beginning to justify itself as a separate form. The old conception of an artificial plot imposed too much strain on the form, and turned the short story into something very much like a potted novel. In the new short story, plot is a servant and not a master, as a machine should be. Needless to say, in the transition towards the new short story, we have had to put up with a great deal of sprawling and formlessness . . . . "
show less
I got this book in a box of old books from a friend. Being short stories, and of an earlier time, I thought it might be interesting. And it was.

The stories were published between July 1921 and June 1922. Yup, 100 years ago. I find it interesting the different story lines, descriptions of surroundings and activities from earlier, and later, eras. These stories were published in various publications such as “The Strand,” The English Review,” “The Dial” and more.

They are vignettes of show more life at the time: people going through life and dealing with situations, good, bad and humorous.

The first one is titled “Where Was Wych Street?” Four men and a woman are sitting in the Wagtail in Wapping, discussing the recent death of a local. During the conversation, mention was made about Wych Street. Each person claims to have had personal dealings on or about the street. Interesting thing was each person had a different view of where the street had been located and what it was like.

Another is “The Bat and Belfry Inn.” A couple is touring North Wales and comes across a little picturesque hotel with a beautiful view of the valley. They stop for tea and to decide if they want to spend a few days there. What they find is a charming hotel with a staff comprised of some very strange characters. All is not what it seems.

Some stories are humorous and are sad, but all are interesting. It was enjoyable reading work by different authors under one cover.
show less
The Best Short Stories of 1915 and the Yearbook of the American Short Story is the first of the series that eventually became the Best American set of series of books. It’s in the public domain and available on Google Books. I grabbed it because I wanted to see what was considered the best way back then. I did not get or appreciate a few of the stories in the 1969 edition, but they were well-crafted. 1915 is another thing though. Several of the stories appear to be selected not for the show more quality of the story, but for the political content. I’m quite a fan of stories being explicitly political, but in at least a couple of cases in this collection, the entries had little else going for them. They were mostly ham-handed in their treatment of the politics as well.

Full review: http://reading.kingrat.biz/reviews/best-short-stories-1915-edward-obrien
show less

You May Also Like

Associated Authors

John Cournos Editor, Contributor
Morley Callaghan Contributor
Sherwood Anderson Contributor
William Faulkner Contributor
Irvin S. Cobb Contributor
Fannie Hurst Contributor
Konrad Bercovici Contributor
Erskine Caldwell Contributor
Ernest Hemingway Contributor
Manuel Komroff Contributor
William Saroyan Contributor
Jesse Stuart Contributor
Whit Burnett Contributor
Martha Foley Contributor
William March Contributor
Mary Heaton Vorse Contributor
Walter D. Edmonds Contributor
Albert Maltz Contributor
Theodore Dreiser Contributor
George Milburn Contributor
Ruth Suckow Contributor
Susan Glaspell Contributor
Allan Seager Contributor
Peter Neagoe Contributor
Richard Wright Contributor
I. V. Morris Contributor
Kay Boyle Contributor
Meridel Le Sueur Contributor
Dorothy Parker Contributor
James T. Farrell Contributor
Ring W. Lardner Contributor
Benedict Thielen Contributor
Thomas Beer Contributor
Stacy Aumonier Contributor
Thomas Wolfe Contributor
Paul Horgan Contributor
Mary Synon Contributor
Charles J. Finger Contributor
Vincent O'Sullivan Contributor
Burton Kline Contributor
Arthur Johnson Contributor
Francis Buzzell Contributor
Lovell Thompson Contributor
Edna Ferber Contributor
Elsie Singmaster Contributor
Alvah C. Bessie Contributor
Tess Slesinger Contributor
Robert Whitehand Contributor
Willa Cather Contributor
DuBose Heyward Contributor
Ben Hecht Contributor
Benjamin Appel Contributor
Naomi Shumway Contributor
Sally Benson Contributor
Rupert Hughes Contributor
George Albee Contributor
Hugh Walpole Contributor
D. H. Lawrence Contributor
Thomas Burke Contributor
Henry Goodman Contributor
Algernon Blackwood Contributor
J. D. Beresford Contributor
James Oppenheim Contributor
A. E. Coppard Contributor
Albert Halper Contributor
Harry Sylvester Contributor
Edita Morris Contributor
Bill Adams Contributor
Waldo David Frank Contributor
Charles Cooke Contributor
Dorothy McCleary Contributor
Dana Burnet Contributor
Leo L. Ward Contributor
Roderick Lull Contributor
Irwin Shaw Contributor
Mary King Contributor
Robert M. Coates Contributor
Frederick Booth Contributor
Liam O'Flaherty Contributor
C. E. Montague Contributor
Sheila Kaye-Smith Contributor
Michael. Seide Contributor
Ira V. Morris Contributor
Eudora Welty Contributor
Ellis St. Joseph Contributor
L. A. G. Strong Contributor
Oliver La Farge Contributor
John Steinbeck Contributor
Pietro Di Donato Contributor
Dorothy M'Cleary Contributor
Manual Komroff Contributor
John P. Marquand Contributor
Alan Marshall Contributor
Roger Burlingame Contributor
Barry Benefield Contributor
S. S. Field Contributor
Newbold Noyes Contributor
Virgil Jordan Contributor
Frances Gregg Contributor
Donn Byrne Contributor
Mary Brecht Pulver Contributor
W. A. Dwiggins Contributor
H. G. Dwight Contributor
Lawrence Perry Contributor
Harris Merton Lyon Contributor
Seumas O'Brien Contributor
Zona Gale Contributor
Tupper Greenwald Contributor
Glenway Wescott Contributor
Ethel Storm Contributor
Wadsworth Camp Contributor
Edna Clare Bryner Contributor
Lee Foster Hartman Contributor
Rose Sidney Contributor
Ben Ames Williams Contributor
Helen Coale Crew Contributor
Louis Bromfield Contributor
James Stevens Contributor
Elma Godchaux Contributor
Rudyard Kipling Contributor
Will E. Ingersoll Contributor
Dorothy Canfield Contributor
Ellen Glasgow Contributor
Djuna Barnes Contributor
Anzia Yezierska Contributor
Horace Fish Contributor
Romer Wilson Contributor
Elias Lieberman Contributor
Thomas Hardy Contributor
Ellen N. La Motte Contributor
Emmett Gowen Contributor
Frances Noyes Hart Contributor
Lincoln Colcord Contributor
Frank Luther Mott Contributor
W. H. Hudson Contributor
Calvin Johnston Contributor
G. F. Alsop Contributor
Louis Brennan Contributor
Laurence Stallings Contributor
Julian Street Contributor
Sinclair Lewis Contributor
George Gilbert Contributor
Scammon Lockwood Contributor
G. Humphrey Contributor
Dudley Schnabel Contributor
Clifford Bragdon Contributor
Wanda Burnett Contributor
Andra Diefenthaler Contributor
Achmed Abdullah Contributor
Harrison Rhodes Contributor
Edward C. Venable Contributor
Edward L. McKenna Contributor
Jean Toomer Contributor
Justin Herman Contributor
Solon K. Stewart Contributor
F. J. Stimson Contributor
Wallace Stegner Contributor
Warren L. Van Dine Contributor
John Fante Contributor
Alice L. Tildesley Contributor
Jerome Weidman Contributor
Arthur Kober Contributor
Harry Hervey Contributor
Gouverneur Morris Contributor
Henry Exall Contributor
Harry Leon Wilson Contributor
Wilma Shore Contributor
Gertrude Atherton Contributor
Mildred Cram Contributor
Felicia Gizycka Contributor
Carlos Drake Contributor
A. B. Shiffrin Contributor
Mary Lerner Contributor
Floyd Dell Contributor
Meyer Levin Cover artist
Valma Clark Contributor
George Weller Contributor
E. B. Ashton Contributor
Jeannette Marks Contributor
Leonard L. Hess Contributor
Roger Sergel Contributor
Morgan Burke Contributor
Weldon Kees Contributor
Harold Garfinkel Contributor
Gean Clark Contributor
Eugene Wright Contributor
Ronald Caldwell Contributor
Frances Eisenberg Contributor
Allen McGinnis Contributor
Ursula MacDougall Contributor
Louis Zara Contributor
R. H. Linn Contributor
Manuel Kamroff Contributor
Madge Jenison Contributor
George Slocombe Contributor
James Pooler Contributor
David E. Krantz Contributor
Robert Penn Warren Contributor
John Cheever Contributor
Walter Schönstedt Contributor
Morton Stern Contributor
Leane Zugsmith Contributor
Richard Hughes Contributor
P. M. Pasinetti Contributor
W. L. George Contributor
Heinz Werner Contributor
Gerald Bullett Contributor
Benedict Theilen Contributor
Wilson Wright Contributor
Alan MacDonald Contributor
Hal Ellson Contributor
F. Tennyson Jesse Contributor
Ira Wolfert Contributor
Osbert Sitwell Contributor
David L. Cohn Contributor
Warren Beck Contributor
Robert Buckner Contributor
Nancy Hale Contributor
Edward Harris Heth Contributor
Caroline Gordon Contributor
A.T. Quiller-Couch Contributor
Emilio Lussu Contributor
Michael Arlen Contributor
Hans Otto Storm Contributor
Mary Arden Contributor
Conrad Aiken Contributor
George Gascoigne Contributor
Elinor Mordaunt Contributor
May Sinclair Contributor
David Freedman Contributor
William Painter Contributor
Don Marquis Contributor
Henry Chettle Contributor
H. M. Tomlinson Contributor
Sir Thomas Elyot Contributor
David Rouland Contributor
Thomas Deloney Contributor
Allen Read Contributor
George Whetstone Contributor
George Pettie Contributor
Thomas Dekker Contributor
Solon R. Barber Contributor
William Adlington Contributor
Martin Armstrong Contributor
Aldous Huxley Contributor
Susan M. Boogher Contributor
Elizabeth Bibesco Contributor
Guy Gilpatric Contributor
T. F. Powys Contributor
Thomas Nashe Contributor
Barnabe Rich Contributor
Josephine Herbst Contributor
Robert Greene Contributor
Anthony Richardson Contributor
Mary Webb Contributor
John Metcalfe Contributor
John Galsworthy Contributor
William Jitro Contributor
Sir Philip Sidney Contributor
Louis Adamic Contributor
Samuel Rowlands Contributor
Nicholas Breton Contributor
Edna Bryner Contributor
Thomas Harman Contributor
Rose Gollup Cohen Contributor
Clement Wood Contributor
Thomas Hoby Contributor
Sir J. M. Barrie Contributor
Erling Larsen Contributor
Walter Gilkyson Contributor
Howell Vines Contributor
Richard Middleton Contributor
Roaldus Richmond Contributor
Oscar Wilde Contributor
H. G. Wells Contributor
Elizabeth Hall Contributor
George Egerton Contributor
Fiona Macleod Contributor
Ernest Dowson Contributor
William E. Wilson Contributor
Caradoc Evans Contributor
John Trevena Contributor
Frank K. Kelly Contributor
Henry W. Nevinson Contributor
Calvin Williams Contributor
Evan Coombs Contributor
Roy Flannagan Contributor
Michael Fessier Contributor
Maurice Hewlett Contributor
Roland Pertwee Contributor
E. L. Grant Watson Contributor
Gilbert Cannan Contributor
Karlton Kelm Contributor
A. H. Z. Carr Contributor
Amory Hare Contributor
Harold W. Brecht Contributor
Edward L. Strater Contributor
Ira V. Morris, Jr. Contributor
Milutin Krunich Contributor
Grant Leenhouts Contributor
Chester T. Crowell Contributor
Eugene Joffe Contributor
Louise Lambertson Contributor
James W. Glover Contributor
Albert Truman Boyd Contributor
Madeline Cole Contributor
Ernest Brace Contributor
John S. Sexton Contributor
Llewellyn Hughes Contributor
Ivan Beede Contributor
Grace S. Coates Contributor
Leon S. Herald Contributor
Louis Mamet Contributor
Eleanor E. Harris Contributor
Prosper Mérimée Contributor
Honoré de Balzac Contributor
Donald Corley Contributor
Anton Chekhov Contributor
Ada Jack Carver Contributor
John Peale Bishop Contributor
Robert Cantwell Contributor
Roark Bradford Contributor
Ben Lucien Burman Contributor
Myles Connolly Contributor
Robert E. Sherwood Contributor
Margaret Leech Contributor
Arthur Huff Fauset Contributor
Bret Harte Contributor
Rose Wilder Lane Contributor
Owen Wister Contributor
Alphonse Daudet Contributor
O. Henry Contributor
Sir Walter Scott Contributor
Gustave Flaubert Contributor
Edgar Allan Poe Contributor
Herman Melville Contributor
Joseph Conrad Contributor
Mark Twain Contributor
Guy de Maupassant Contributor
Katharine Brush Contributor
Grace Flandrau Contributor
Robert Mullen Contributor
Edmund Ware Contributor
Pernet Patterson Contributor
MacGregor Jenkins Contributor
Sarah Addington Contributor
L. Paul Contributor
Edwin Seaver Contributor
Raymond Weeks Contributor
Max White Contributor
James Hopper Contributor
Carlton Brown Contributor
Sara Haardt Contributor
Robert McCarty Contributor
Virginia Tracy Contributor
Lloyd Morris Contributor
Alfred Morang Contributor
Vincent McHugh Contributor
Louis Reed Contributor
Dorothy Thomas Contributor
Alan Sullivan Contributor
Frank Shay Contributor
Susan Meriwether Contributor
James N. Hall Contributor
J.P. Marquand Contributor
Orgill MacKenzie Contributor
Graham Greene Contributor
A. G. Morris Contributor
E. H. Young Contributor
H.E. Bates Contributor
L. A. Pavey Contributor
Frank O'Connor Contributor
Charles Hodges Contributor
Janko Lavrin Contributor
Douglas Boyd Contributor
Roger Dataller Contributor
Urith Voyle Contributor
Elizabeth Bowen Contributor
L. P. Hartley Contributor
H. A. Manhood Contributor
Neil Bell Contributor

Statistics

Works
64
Also by
2
Members
386
Popularity
#62,659
Rating
½ 3.3
Reviews
6
ISBNs
79
Favorited
1

Charts & Graphs