A Good School is a coming-of-age story set in a Connecticut prep school in the early 1940s. Students, teachers, and school officials all struggle as World War II looms in the distance.
Richard Yates based the fictional Dorset Academy on a school he attended, Avon Old Farms School, and 15-year-old William Grove is Yates's stand-in. Dorset, like Avon, is not an elite school.
Grove struggles in every class except English. His talent for writing eventually leads to a role as editor-in-chief of the school paper. Through work, he builds confidence and gains purpose. He also earns some respect and makes some complicated but meaningful friendships.
Yates includes personal notes in a foreword and afterword. He writes in the afterword that his time at Avon "taught me the rudiments of my trade." He also mentions his and his father's skepticism of the school and each other:
And is there no further good to be said of the school, or of my time in it? Or of me?
I will probably always ask my father such questions in the privacy of my heart, seeking his love as I failed and failed to seek it when it mattered; but all that—as he used to suggest on being pressed to sing "Danny Boy," taking a backward step, making a little negative wave of the hand, smiling and frowning at the same time—all that is in the past.
Notes:
A Good School was published in 1978.
See my other posts about Yates: something about “Revolutionary Road” by Richard Yates, something about Richard Yates, and something about Richard Yates’s “Liars in Love.”
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