Comprehensive information and links about John Updike

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John Updike (born March 18, 1932John Updike is an American novelist, poet, and short story writer born in Reading, Pennsylvania. He lived in nearby Shillington until he was 13. Updike's most famous works are his Rabbit series ( both won Pulitzer Prizes for Updike. Describing his subject as "the American small town, Protestant middle class", Updike is well known for his careful craftsmanship and prolific writing, having published 21 novels and more than a dozen short story collections as well as poetry, literary criticism and children's books. His works often explore sex, faith, death, and their interrelationship.

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Overview

As a child, Updike suffered from psoriasis and stammering, and he was encouraged by his mother to write. Updike entered Harvard University on a full scholarship. He served as president of the Harvard Lampoon before graduating as a regular contributor. In 1957, Updike left Manhattan and moved to Ipswich, Massachusetts, which served as the model for the fictional New England town of Tarbox in his 1968 novel, , which included both "Who Made Yellow Roses Yellow?" and "A Trillion Feet of Gas." Other classic stories include "AP," "Pigeon Feathers," "The Alligators," and "Museums and Women."

He favors realism and naturalism in his writing; for instance, the opening of spans several pages describing a pick-up basketball game in intricate detail. Most of his novels follow this at least loosely, and generally feature everyday people in middle America — the hero of his writing is typically an everyman one can find on the streets. On occasion Updike abandons this setting, examples being illuminating three versions of the legend including William Shakespeare's). Other important novels include (1986). In addition to Harry 'Rabbit' Angstrom, a recurrent Updike alter-ego is the moderately well-known, unprolific Jewish novelist Henry Bech who is chronicled in three comic short story cycles, (1998). His stories involving the socially-conscious (and social-climbing) couple "The Maples" are widely considered to be autobiographical, and several were the basis for a television movie entitled starring Michael Moriarty and Blythe Danner which was broadcast on NBC. Updike stated that he chose this surname for the characters because he admired the beauty and resilliency of the tree of that name.

While Updike has continued to publish at the rate of about a book a year, critical opinion on his work since the early nineties has been generally muted, often damning. His novelistic scope in recent years has nevertheless been wide: retellings of mythical stories (Tristan and Isolde in , is due for publication in June 2006.

A large anthology of short stories from his formative career, titled Faulkner Award for Fiction. He wrote that his intention with the form was to "give the mundane its beautiful due."

Updike is a well-known and practicing critic ( 1999), and is often in the center of critical wars of words. Tom Wolfe called him one of "my Three Stooges" (the other two were John Irving and Norman Mailer). Updike has also been involved in critical duels with Gore Vidal and John Gardner, authors notorious for their criticism.

He has four children and currently lives in Beverly Farms, Massachusetts with his second wife, Martha. His new book is a collection of essays on art, (Knopf, 2005).

Updike has long been rumoured to be among the front runners for the Nobel Prize in Literature.

[Rabbit] loves men, uncomplaining with their pot bellies and cross-hatched red necks, embarrassed for what to talk about when the game is over, whatever the game is. What a threadbare thing we make of life! Yet what a marvelous thing the mind is, they can't make a machine like it; and the

Tell your mother, if she asks, that maybe we'll meet some other time. Under the pear trees, in Paradise. (

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