''Omensetter's Luck'' employs many literary techniques associated with the modernist literary movement, such as the inclusion of several
unreliable narrators and the use of
stream of consciousness. The novel is structured in three sections: "The Triumph of Israbestis Tott," "The Love and Sorrow of Henry Pimber," and "The Reverend Jethro Furber's Change of Heart," each of which is narrated in the third person. The Jethro Furber section, which is told in
stream of consciousness and takes up the majority of the novel, is reported by many readers to be the most difficult section to follow. In a
Paris Review interview, Gass said, "When I first wrote the book, Furber wasn't even in it," and that it was only after rewrites that "Furber began to emerge. The book began to be the book I should have been writing all along. Now, a lot of people find that the Furber section is where the book goes to hell. As far as I am concerned, it is the only justification for that book." == Praise ==