Acres of print have been consecrated to Updike and his achievements, from academic treatises to Nicholson Baker’s sublimely idiosyncratic tribute U & I, but perhaps the book that captures Updike’s writerly public persona best is a curious little gem called Updike in Cincinnati: A Literary Performance, an account (edited by James Schiff) of Updike’s readings and musings at a short story festival in 2001.
Mr. Updike’s four keenly observed Rabbit novels (“Rabbit, Run,” 1960; “Rabbit Redux,” 1971; “Rabbit Is Rich,” 1981; and “Rabbit at Rest,” 1990) chronicled the adventures of one Harry Rabbit Angstrom — high school basketball star turned car salesman, householder and errant husband — and his efforts to cope with the seismic public changes (from feminism to the counterculture to antiwar protests) that rattled his cozy nest. Harry, who self-importantly compared his own fall from grace to this country’s waning power, his business woes to the national deficit, was both a representative American of his generation and a kind of scientific specimen — an index to the human species and its propensity for doubt and narcissism and self immolation.
In fulfilling Stendhal’s classic definition of a novel as “a mirror that strolls along a highway,” reflecting both the “blue of the skies” and “the mud puddles underfoot,” the Rabbit novels captured four decades of middle-class American life. Mr. Updike’s stunning and much underestimated 1996 epic, “In the Beauty of the Lilies,” tackled an even wider swath of history. In charting the fortunes of an American family through some 80 years, the author showed how dreams, habits and predilections are handed down generation to generation, parent to child, even as he created a kaleidoscopic portrait of this country from its nervous entry into the 20th century to its stumbling approach to the millennium.
Mr. Updike’s novels wove an explicit and teeming tapestry of male and female appetites. He noticed astutely, precisely, unnervingly. His stories, some of the best ever written by anyone, were jewels of existential comedy, domestic anguish and restraint.
And his nonfiction! Even when his essays included a harsh criticism, he politely coiled it, tucked it inside, part snake, part rose, and the reader would feel the bite sprung silkily only at the end — in a balletic allegiance to both generosity and candor. Self-knowledge and self-forgiveness bestowed their own empiricism: he knew too what it was to create weak art.
Thomas Mallon (at NRO):
Perhaps the keenest compliment one can pay him as a man is to say that his life will make for a lousy biography: Just about no scandal; precious little feuding; almost no phony contretemps and posturing. He was deeply interested in sex and God, but more than anything he was interested in working—steadily and prodigiously. The Rabbit books, taken together, are the great American novel of the second half of the twentieth century. Even when he was through with them, he kept writing fiction as if, culturally, it still counted—as if it could still land a writer on the cover of Time. He loved his country, avoided political faddishness, was a devoted Democrat and got both of his national medals—one in the arts and another in the humanities—from Republican presidents.
The Artist Formerly Known As The Virgin Ben:
John Updike’s Dead: Do We Still Have To Pretend To Like His Books?
For the last few years, we have been treated to a bevy of columns and articles lionizing John Updike. It is certainly a tragedy that he is gone – he had massive literary potential. But since the media has been busy writing his eulogy for years, it does not seem unfair to add a note of reality: Updike was not a great writer. He was not even a very good one.
It has always puzzled me how the media selects “great writers.” I, for one, would consider Frederick Forsythe’s driving, brilliant action novel “The Day of the Jackal” far better literature than Don DeLillo’s pointless and meandering “Underworld.” I think Leon Uris’ “Mila 18″ is far more compelling than the Cormac McCarthy’s purposefully obscure “Blood Meridian.” It isn’t that I don’t enjoy the occasional psychological novel – it’s tough to argue with either Tolstoy or Dostoevsky. But the gauge of authorial greatness shouldn’t be the ability to pen 600 pages of plot-less description of characters who would bore you to death or repulse you in real life.
What, then, makes John Updike such a god to the media? It certainly isn’t his writing, which vacillates from the tedious to the atrocious. His style falls somewhere between Thomas Hardy and Kate Chopin on the soporific scale.
He had "massive literary potential"?
Jesus. Fucking. Christ.
I’m just speechless as are UCLA and Harvard who failed this manchild miserably. Really.
His parents should ask for a refund.





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…or stephen king’s masterpiece “it” in comparison to the boring “the iliad”.
It’s very tough to argue with Tolstoy or Dostoevsky. But it’s easy to namecheck them, I guess.
And DeLillo is “pointless and meandering”? I guess VB will never know the joys of Pynchon (who has a new book out soon – woohoo!).
The bold, driving flavor of Richards’ Wild Irish Rose is, as everybody but elitist wine snobs knows, far more compelling than Chateau Margaux.
His parents should ask for a retroactive abortion. But they’re probably so proud of him for succeeding despite his obvious handicaps of being a moronic child of wealth & privilege.
Nimoy more rhymey than Neruda.
Hey, at least he wrote it himself. He did write it all himself, didn’t he?
Merciful doG.
Damn you, MBouffant! You took the words etc. etc.
Well, our host set it up very well.
I suddenly have newfound respect for Jonah Goldberg’s sense of self awareness.
It’s one thing to not care much for Updike (he’s not a fave of mine, really), but it’s quite another to trash him while extolling the virtues of Leon Uris.
Virgin Ben is brain-dead. Do we still have to pretend he was more important than the hole in a doughnut?
Good writers require good readers.
When my tastes diverge this widely from that of people whom I known to be smarter than I am, or even just from the majority of humans who’ve weighed in on a subject, I like to assume I’m the one who just doesn’t get it. Ben, on the other hand, seems to be laughing at everyone in the hopes of finally spotting the guy who’s wearing no clothes. (Shame he was in the can when Bush paraded by, really.)
Jeezy creezy, this poor boob is going to read these words a few years’ hence and burn with shame.
At least let’s hope he does.
Yeah, poor guy. Given a few more years, he might have written something people really wanted to read. Like John Grisham. Something for the airport book trade, instead of all those books about rabbits.
You, sir, haven’t read Crime and Punishment. Next time, make this less obvious.
Disclaimer: I love Dostoevsky very much, Constance Gardner versions especially.
You dudes need to back off my broseph Ben. He’s just got the manly, non-pussy defiled virtue of someone who knows Jewel’s “A Night Without Armor” is way better than anything Shakespeare ever wrote.
(Even) Shorter Ben :
“If I never ripped this guy off, how good can he be ?”
I always figured the Virgin Ben as a Portnoy’s Complaint kind of guy, if you get my drift, which I’m sure you do and would rather wish you hadn’t. Ick.
I clicked on the link labeled ‘The Virgin Ben’ and it took me to his kindergarten-level article on, get ready for it, ‘Big Hollywood’.
Even funnier, the first three comments are blasting his ass for being so stupid.
I didn’t like all of the Updike I have read (although ‘Rabbit, Run’ leaves me speechless at how well he made the Fifties live and breath). But, unlike Ben hair Blago, I knew the problem was with me most likely.
His style falls somewhere between Thomas Hardy and Kate Chopin on the soporific scale.
The only thing I agree with Ben about is with regard to Thomas Hardy.
Chacun a son gout and all that, but still, announcing in public that you consider Thomas Hardy’s writing soporific is tantamount to sporting a “Philistine on board” bumper sticker — to this reader at least.
Damn, you beat me to the punch on this one,lol.
A Virgin Ben book review:
Floppsy and Moppsy were incredibly underdeveloped and facile characters and don’t get me started on the phrasing – it was like it was written for children. What’s that? That’s Peter Rabbit? Rabbit, Run? Never heard of it. I recommend that one with choo choo that tries real hard. It’s good cuz it’s true. I think.
I wonder if the Virgin Ben could see anything in “A Suitable Boy” at all. I was very depressed because it was an entirely realistic, middle-class novel, but Vikram Seth is a good writer! He has a very plodding style, but the care for the detail and the characters makes you want to keep reading.
“Hub Fans BId Kid Adieu” masterpiece. Bech turned me off to Updike, even though I know he is a parody. Did Mr. Shapiro mention Bech in his article?
(OK, I suspect at least two parts of ASB helped to put me to sleep, but this was 11:00 at night)
No Bech, but half of it is bashing Updike for being too liberal. Hilarious.
Scott from Powerline, ladies and gentlemen, writing something unqualifiedly positive about Updike!
Also, Cynthia Ozick: “Language in all its fecundity is Updike’s native country, and he is its patriot”, from same blog post.
Why don’t we hear more about Benjamin Shapiro Legal Consulting?
http://www.sadlyno.com/archives/16078.html
It could have massive potential, ya know?
I have to disagree with Hatmandu. I think VB’s review of “floppsy and moppsy” would go like this “incredibly well written. I was on the edge of my seat. If only Hardy could have written like that!”
aimai
I guess the V.B. is too young to know that the correct right-wing line on Updike is that he never won a Nobel because he never came out against the Vietnam War. Also, Gore Vidal called him a reactionary.
(Confession: I liked Rabbit, Run and The Centaur quite a bit, but otherwise he leaves me cold. I think Roth is the best of that generation, by far.
I could go all day trashing Hemingway, but at some point I also recognize that there are people that are big fans, that Hemingway, in some way, speaks to them and their way of thinking. So for me to generalize that Hemingway is somehow useless to literacy is hubris, at the least, and assholery at the worst.
I mean, hell, Hemingway was no Margaret Weis. The deep introspection of the Dragonlance novels will always be timeless and a benchmark for all. Right?
Thomas Hardy?
OK. I guess except for the rape, the bastard child, the destroyed marriage, the murder, the extra-marital sex and the execution, Tess of the D’Ubervilles is kind of lacking in incident.
Like Ben has ever read any Hardy. And while I had problems with much of Updike’s work (The Rabbit books being the expection), one perfect Updike snetnece contains more wisdom and insight then poor Ben will ever attain in his smug, self-congratulatory lifetime.
Maybe he just didn’t read that one. Endless minute descriptions of the horrifying consequences for women of not being a virgin when you get married probably just aren’t his thing.
For that matter, why did he wait until Updike died to say that he didn’t like his stuff? Did he think that Updike would show up on his doorstep to kick his ass? V.B. is certainly egotistical enough to think that Updike would even notice his fitful fretting.
Also, as if it needs to be said: not that Updike couldn’t have done it.
Leon Uris? Really? He compares Mitla 18 to Updike and finds in favor of Uris?
Jesus fucking Christ humping a two-dollar hooker on good Friday. What’s next, an exegesis on how Tom Clancy novels truly outshine Twain?
For a Harvard Law grad to wash out of a big law firm and go directly into some form of self-named private practice is very, very, very bad news professionally. I have never seen anyone who’s done this to do a phoenix number and get back into the legal swing of things, and neither has the manly Mr. Biscuitbarrel, my own in-house counsel and source of legal gossip. However, I do thank you, JDM3, for handing me a heapin’ helpin’ of finger-lickin’ Schadenfreude before I go off, cackling to myself, to do the dishes and start dinner…
Damn, now he’s picking on dead people? Something has really gone wrong in V. B.’s life. There are a lot of wingnuts who have mastered premature curmudgeonism, but Ben approaches a level of bitterness that worries me.
And you’re right, he’s never read Dostoevsky. Talk about repulsive characters …
Philistine, schmilistine. Reading through ”Tess” and ”The Mayor” was more than enough for me. Ne’er again.
I think you mean he’s no Tracey Hickman …
I like Garnett’s work, but prefer the Richard Pevear and Larissa Volokhonsky translations of Dostoevsky that I’ve read. But Garnett’s very good.