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FRtR > Outlines > American Literature > American Prose Since 1945: Realism and Experimentation > Authors > John Updike (1932- )
An Outline of American Literature
by Kathryn VanSpanckeren
American Prose Since 1945: Realism and Experimentation: John Updike (1932- )
*** Index***
John Updike, like Cheever, is also regarded as a writer of
manners with his suburban settings, domestic themes, reflections
of ennui and wistfulness, and, particularly, his fictional
locales on the eastern seaboard, in Massachusetts and
Pennsylvania. Updike is best known for his four Rabbit books,
depictions of the life of a man -- Harry "Rabbit" Angstrom --
through the ebbs and flows of his existence across four decades
of American social and political history. Rabbit, Run
(1960) is a
mirror of the 1950s, with Angstrom an aimless, disaffected young
husband. Rabbit Redux (1971) -- spotlighting the
counterculture
of the 1960s -- finds Angstrom still without a clear goal or
purpose or viable escape route from mundaneness. In Rabbit Is
Rich (1981), Harry has become prosperous through an
inheritance
against the landscape of the wealthy self-centeredness of the
1970s, as the Vietnam era wanes. The final volume, Rabbit at
Rest
(1990), glimpses Angstrom's reconciliation with life, and
inadvertent death, against the backdrop of the 1980s.
Among Updike's other novels are The Centaur (1963),
Couples
(1968), and Bech: A Book (1970). He possesses the most
brilliant
style of any writer today, and his short stories offer
scintillating examples of its range and inventiveness.
Collections include The Same Door (1959), The Music
School
(1966), Museums and Women (1972), Too Far To Go
(1979), and
Problems (1979). He has also written several volumes of
poetry
and essays.
*** Index***
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