

With the help of editor John Wolf, Jenny’s book becomes a bestseller and turns her into something of an iconic figure in the feminist community.

Garp and his mother return to the United States and look to acquire publishers for their books. Garp meanwhile has completed a novella titled The Pension Grillparzer and Helen agrees to marry him. Jenny accompanies him and is at work on her autobiography, A Sexual Suspect. Feeling he needs life experience to become a writer, Garp moves to Vienna, Austria after his graduation. She tells him she will not marry him unless he becomes a real writer. Helen Holm, whose father is the school’s wrestling coach, becomes Garp’s love interest. Jenny then gets a job at a boys’ boarding school, The Steering School, which her son ultimately attends and which is where he decides he wants to be a writer. When her son is born, Jenny names him T.S. To her, the soldier is Technical Sergeant Garp and he dies shortly after her self-serving act. Jenny gets herself pregnant by using the body of a wounded soldier suffering from brain damage. Jenny is employed as a nurse at a hospital in Boston during the second World War. The predominant narrative voice is that of a writer who is composing a biography about Garp called Lunacy and Sorrow: The Life and Art of T.S.

The novel begins at the time of Garp’s conception.

The novel includes passages from Garp’s books as well as an epilogue updating readers on the lives of the characters after the story ends. Because of much of the content of his novels, Garp is seen as an anti-feminist. The novel tackles the theme of feminism with Garp’s mother, Jenny Fields, becoming a well-known voice for the movement. Garp and his relationships with his mother, wife, and sons. Largely considered to be Irving’s best work, The World According to Garp is the story of novelist T.S. John Irving’s fourth novel, The World According to Garp won him widespread recognition as well as a nomination for the National Book Award for Fiction in 1979.
