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John Updike Biography and List of Works

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American novelist, short story writer and poet, internationally known for his novels RABBIT, RUN (1960), RABBIT REDUX (1971), RABBIT IS RICH (1981), and RABBIT AT REST (1990). Each novel follows the life Harry "Rabbit" Angstrom, a star athlete, from his youth through the social and sexual upheavals of the 1960s, to the later periods of his life, and his final decline. Updike's oeuvre has been large, consisting of novels, collections of poems, short stories, essays, and literary criticism. Among the writers whose works he has reviewed are such names as Philip Roth, Saul Bellow, Kurt Vonnegut, Joyce Carol Oates, Iris Murdoch, Michael Tournier, Raymond Queneau, Umberto Eco, Milan Kundera, Evgenii Evtushenko, Gabriel García Márquez, Mario Vargas Llosa, and Isabel Allende.

"The heart prefers to move against the grain of circumstance; perversity is the soul's very life."
(from Assorted Prose, 1965)

John Updike was born in Shillington, a small town in Pennsylvania, which became the model of his fictional towns of Olinger and Brewer. Updike's childhood was shadowed by psoriasis and stammering, but his mother encouraged him to write. In his childhood he lived on an isolated farm, from where he dreamed of escape. He consumed books by Erle Stanley Gardner, Ellery Queen, Agatha Christie, John Dickson Carr, and P. G. Wodehouse. Dead authors depressed him. "My inability to read bravely as a boy had this advantage: when I went to college, I was a true tabula rasa, and received gratefully the imprint of my instructors' opinion, and got good marks." (from New York Times, July 4, 1965) Updike chose Harvard as his university because it was the location of the Harvard Lampoon. After high school in Shillington, where his father worked as a science teacher, Updike attended Harvard. He majored in English in 1954, and contributed to and later edited the Harvard Lampoon. With his wife Mary Pennington he spent the academic year 1954-1955 at Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Arts in Oxford, England. ("A soggy little island huffing and puffing to keep up with Western Europe." from Picked Up Pieces, 1975) In 1955 he joined the staff of The New Yorker, writing editorials, poetry, stories, and criticism. After the author's first marriage dissolved, he married Martha Bernhard in 1977.

In 1957 Updike left the magazine and became a full time writer. He moved to Ipswich, Massachusetts, where he lived for seventeen years. It became the model for the fictional town of Tarbox in his novel COUPLES (1968), a portrait of sexual passion and realignment amongst a group of young suburban married couples. His first book, THE CARPENTERED HEN AND OTHER TAME CREATURES, a collection of poetry, appeared in 1958. Updike's first novel, THE POORHOUSE FAIR (1959), is about the residents of an old people's home. The first book about his famous hero, Harry Angstrom, the sexually magnetic, blue-eyed, naturally athletic Swede, ended with the verb 'Runs.' In Rabbit, Redux - Redux is Latin for brought back - Harry is a middle-aged bourgeois, who finds his life shattered by the infidelity of his wife. Updike leaves the reader with a question -- O.K.? The last word in Rabbit Is Rich was 'His.' Rabbit at Rest, set in the late 1980s, paralles the decay of the society, AIDS-plagued America, and Rabbit's swollen body, his chest pains, and his feeling that there is "nothing under you but black space..." After leaving Rabbit in 1990, Updike published in 2000 a 182-page novella called 'Rabbit Remembered' in LICKS OF LOVE, a collection of short stories. 'Rabbit Remembered' ends with the word 'Gladly.'

THE CENTAUR (1963) uses a mythological framework to explore the relationship between a schoolmaster father and his son. THE COUP (1979) is an exotic first-person narrative by an ex-dictator of a fictitious African state. In 2000 Updike's prequel to Hamlet, in which the moody prince is not the central character, focusing instead upon his mother Queen Gertrude, her husband, and Claudius, her husband's younger brother, was published.

Updike has become one of the most successful American writers. As an essayist Updike is a gentle satirist, poking fun at American life and customs, without mean-spirited nihilism. He observes the ordinary life he sees around him, and frequently asks the reader to recognize and reconsider one's preconceptions. In 'The Bankrupt Man' (1983) Updike turn upside-down the common views of a bankrupt and proves that there is an afterlife:

"The bankrupt man buys himself a motorcycle. He is going to hotdig it all the way to Santa Barbara and back. He has a bankrupt sister in Santa Barbara. Also, there are business details to be cleared up along the way, in Pittsburgh, South Bend, Dodge City, Santa Fe, and Palm Springs. Being bankrupt is an expansionist process; it generates even new horizons."

Updike considers the opportunity to produce reviews educational for himself and the reader, 'for writing educates the writer as it goes along.' Or: 'My purpose in reading has ever secretly been not to come and judge but to come and steal.' In his criticism Updike's measures the works with traditional maxims: felicity in style, accuracy in presenting one's subject, precision in describing external and inner world, and humanistic values.

Updike have received several awards, among them Guggenheim Fellow (1959), Rosenthal Award, National Institute of Arts and Letters (1959), National Book Award in Fiction (1964), O. Henry Prize (1967-68), American Book Award (1982), National Book Critics Circle Award, for fiction (1982, 1990), Union League Club Abraham Lincoln Award (1982), National Arts Club Medal of Honour (1984); National Medal of the Arts (1989). In 1976 he became a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters. Updike's novels Rabbit is Rich and Rabbit at Rest both won Pulitzer Prizes. After Updike laid Rabbit Angstrom to rest, his alter ego, Jewish American novelist Harry Bech, is still on the literary scene.

Note: Updike's mother published the novel Enchantment under her maiden name Linda Grace Hoyer in 1971. Updike's son is a writer and the author himself was the subject of Nicholson Baker's book U and I (1991) - See also: The New Yorker's literary circle and John Cheever, who, like Updike, has revealed under the respectable surface of suburban American life, unfilled dreams and painful feelings of inadequacy.

For further reading: John Updike Revisited by James A. Schiff (1998); John Updike's Rabbit at Rest by Dilvo I. Ristoff (1998); Updike and the Patriarchal Dilemma by Mary O'Connell (1996); John Updike; A Study of the Short Fiction by Robert M. Luscher (1993); John Updike by Judie Newman (1988); John Updike, ed. by Harold Bloom (1987); John Updike by Robert Detweiler (1984); Critical Essays on John Updike, ed. by William R. Macnaughton (1982); The Other John Updike by Donald J. Greiner (1981); John Updike and the Three Great Secret Things: Sex, Religion, and Art by George W. Hunt (1980); John Updike by Rachael C. Burchard (1971)

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