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Thread: John Updike

  1. #16
    Registered User myrna22's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by DanielBenoit View Post
    I was in the bookstore today and came across Updike's works. Having never read him I decided to introduce myself by reading some of the short stories from Pigeon Feathers, and my God was there some sublime stuff in there. Being a writer of the latter-half of the twentieth century I was suprised to find his works more close to that of modernists like Proust or Nabokov, as oppose to those of the Beat generation.

    Anyway, his prose is just so superb and poetic that he may just stand close to the heights of Proust or Nabokov. Anyone read him?
    I have read Run Rabitt Run and something else, about 20 or more years ago. Some short stories. At the A & P is memorable. But on the whole, I do not like is work or find it memorable, and I didn't care for his poetry, which I've seen in the New Yorker. After reading a few of his things, I've learned I have no interest in his work. Definitely not Nabokov quality.

    As an aside, I once met someone who had worked for him as a nanny. Apparently he and his wife treated the domestic help very badly. They were living in London and this woman told me they treated her like lower class person, little to no respect shown toward her and skimpy on the pay, etc. I learned this long after I had decided I didn't like his work.

  2. #17
    blasphemer DisPater's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by myrna22 View Post
    I have read Run Rabitt Run and something else, about 20 or more years ago. Some short stories. At the A & P is memorable. But on the whole, I do not like is work or find it memorable, and I didn't care for his poetry, which I've seen in the New Yorker. After reading a few of his things, I've learned I have no interest in his work. Definitely not Nabokov quality.

    As an aside, I once met someone who had worked for him as a nanny. Apparently he and his wife treated the domestic help very badly. They were living in London and this woman told me they treated her like lower class person, little to no respect shown toward her and skimpy on the pay, etc. I learned this long after I had decided I didn't like his work.
    You have read Run Rabbit Run and another book by John Updike; he wrote more than 20 novels (not to mention all the short stories). And you say 'But on the whole, I do not like is work or find it memorable'?! Only after two books? This more superficial that hip-hop lyrics.
    the main idea with the books is that there are too many not worthy to be read.

  3. #18
    A ist der Affe NickAdams's Avatar
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    I have Pigeon Feathers and The Centaur; I haven't read either yet, but I plan on doing so (Updike isn't very high on my to read list). I also have In the Beauty of the Lillies and I've been thinking about giving it away; has anyone read it?

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  4. #19
    Registered User myrna22's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by DisPater View Post
    You have read Run Rabbit Run and another book by John Updike; he wrote more than 20 novels (not to mention all the short stories). And you say 'But on the whole, I do not like is work or find it memorable'?! Only after two books? This more superficial that hip-hop lyrics.
    I take great offense at being called supeficial because I say I don't like a novelist's work. I don't need to read all 20 books Updike wrote to know I don't like his work. Anyone who knows about writers and literature realizes that each writer has a voice and a style. Reading every book an author writes is not necessary to realize one does not care for the author's work. If anything is superficial it is someone whose mentality is so simplistic as to suggest one needs to read all or most of an author's work to know if they like that author's work.

    I read at least two of his novels and several short stories and poems. If you read my post closely you would notice I said I read more than one or two novels. Also, you seem to have misread what I said, which was "But on the whole, I do not like his work or find it memorable." I said I, on the whole, did not like his work. My feelings, on the whole. I did not say I did not like the whole of his work. I did not say anything about the whole of his work but about my feelings regarding his work, which are that I am not interested. In case you don't understand how English sentence structure works, in my sentence, 'on the whole' is a prepositional phrase acting as an adverb and modifying the verb phrase 'I do not like.' When I used the phrase 'on the whole,' I was not referring to Updike's work 'AS a whole.'
    Last edited by myrna22; 01-20-2010 at 01:08 AM.

  5. #20
    Registered User Babbalanja's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Virgil View Post
    I agree with you that Updike is an average novelist, but may I ask what does being in the middle class have anything to do with either being a great novelist or not? I would imagine that most writers are in the middle class. So does one have to be in the lower class or the upper class to be a great writer?
    Okay, "middle class" wasn't the best way to describe my opinion. I should have been more specific about what I dislike in Updike.

    He just lacks any unique perspective on postwar American society. I realize he was in the same socioeconomic category as people like Bellow, Vonnegut, Vidal, Robert Coover, or even Philip Roth. However, each of these writers had original ideas or a satirical imagination that made his work interesting. Updike is just one of those bland, entertaining writers whose work appeals to readers who don't expect anything artistically or politically daring.

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  6. #21
    Registered User neilgee's Avatar
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    Like most of those who have replied I read the Rabbit series [well, the first three, I havn't got round to Rabbit at rest yet] and one book of essays which I did find insightful in parts although I don't agree with Updike's political stance. I havn't read any of the short stories but to be honest he isn't top of my "to read" list. He is a good writer, it's just that I think there are alot of better ones around.
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  7. #22
    Vincit Qui Se Vincit Virgil's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Babbalanja View Post
    Okay, "middle class" wasn't the best way to describe my opinion. I should have been more specific about what I dislike in Updike.

    He just lacks any unique perspective on postwar American society. I realize he was in the same socioeconomic category as people like Bellow, Vonnegut, Vidal, Robert Coover, or even Philip Roth. However, each of these writers had original ideas or a satirical imagination that made his work interesting. Updike is just one of those bland, entertaining writers whose work appeals to readers who don't expect anything artistically or politically daring.
    I'm not sure any major writer is politically daring. Perhaps you mean culturally defying or culturally challenging. You realize he was an artist as well. If anything it strikes me that his work is overly arty. While he probably captures the real life in the moment of the writing, I agree it lacks a certain transcendence. At a minimum though, to be fair to him, I think his prose is as well crafted as any in this century. He knew how to write.
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  8. #23
    Registered User Babbalanja's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Virgil View Post
    I'm not sure any major writer is politically daring. Perhaps you mean culturally defying or culturally challenging.
    Why would those be mutually exclusive? If I had to pick an author who was all three, how about William S. Burroughs?
    At a minimum though, to be fair to him, I think his prose is as well crafted as any in this century. He knew how to write.
    Yes, he was a talented writer, no doubt.

    Regards,

    Istvan
    "It is time we realized that to presume knowledge where one has only pious hope is a species of evil."
    — Sam Harris

  9. #24
    Vincit Qui Se Vincit Virgil's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Babbalanja View Post
    Why would those be mutually exclusive? If I had to pick an author who was all three, how about William S. Burroughs?
    They don't necessarily have to be mutually inclusive. I've never seen any novels that centered on political parties, or levels of taxation, or who controls the Senate. I guess it's probable some are. Now an author may take on an issue, and perhaps the reader can identify which political party might be associated with that issue. But their assumption may be wrong. Over time, political parties change positions. Those issues the authors take on tend to be culturally driven. I've never read Burroughs.
    LET THERE BE LIGHT

    "Love follows knowledge." – St. Catherine of Siena

    My literature blog: http://ashesfromburntroses.blogspot.com/

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