[H]olds a great deal of interest for a general audience as well as the Updike specialist.

American Studies The University of Kansas

A fundamental dimension of this biography is Batchelor's attempt, four years after Updike's death, to demonstrate how much of Updike was either not treated or mischaracterized by critics during his life. Summing Up: Recommended. All readers.

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One of the world's greatest writers, John Updike chronicled America for more than five decades. This book examines the essence of Updike's writing, propelling our understanding of his award-winning fiction, prose, and poetry.
Widely considered "America's Man of Letters," John Updike is a prolific novelist and critic with an unprecedented range of work across more than 50 years. No author has ever written from the variety of vantages or spanned topics like Updike did. Despite being widely recognized as one of the nation's literary greats, scholars have largely ignored Updike's vast catalog of work outside the Rabbit tetralogy. This work provides the first detailed examination of Updike's body of criticism, poetry, and journalism, and shows how that work played a central role in transforming his novels. The book disputes the common misperception of Updike as merely a chronicler of suburban, middle-class America by focusing on his novels and stories that explore the wider world, from the groundbreaking The Coup (1978) to Terrorist (2006). Popular culture scholar Bob Batchelor asks readers to reassess Updike's career by tracing his transformation over half a century of writing.

Les mer
This book examines the essence of Updike's writing, propelling our understanding of his award-winning fiction, prose, and poetry.

Widely considered "America's Man of Letters," John Updike is a prolific novelist and critic with an unprecedented range of work across more than 50 years.

Les mer

Preface
Acknowledgments
1 John Updike: An American Writer and His Times
2 Why Write: Updike as Craftsman, Professional, and Celebrity
3 Pennsylvania as American Ideal
4 Updike's Poetry
5 Rabbit, Run and American Culture
6 Chronicler of American Sexuality
7 Rabbit Lives and Dies
8 Between Writer and Reader: Updike as Critic
9 Master Storyteller
10 Radical Departures: Updike as Experimental Novelist
11 Updike's Audience
12 Racing toward the Apocalypse: Updike's New America
13 Evolution of a Literary Lion
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index

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"Professor Batchelor’s expertise as a scholar of popular culture gives him a unique perspective from which to evaluate the career of a writer whose influence on his own times is just now coming to be understood. With a keen critical eye and a certain degree of bravado, Batchelor offers a striking defense of Updike from charges made against his irrelevancy, his unwillingness to venture out of his comfort zone, and his commitment to realism in his fiction. With insight and clarity, Batchelor offers a portrait of Updike that dispels the notion that he is simply a “fifties kind of guy” nostalgic for a bygone age in America. It is impossible to come away from John Updike: A Critical Biography without feeling that Updike is a figure worthy of attention now and in the future."
Les mer
One of the world's greatest writers, John Updike chronicled America for more than five decades. This book examines the essence of Updike's writing, propelling our understanding of his award-winning fiction, prose, and poetry.
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780313384035
Publisert
2013-04-23
Utgiver
Vendor
Praeger Publishers Inc
Vekt
539 gr
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
248

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Bob Batchelor, PhD, is assistant professor in the School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Kent State University and academic coordinator of its online master's program in public relations. Batchelor is the author or editor of 21 books, including 3 volumes in Greenwood's "Popular Culture through History" series: The 1900s, The 1980s, and The 2000s. In addition, he edited Greenwood's four-volume American Pop: Popular Culture Decade by Decade; Praeger's three-volume Cult Pop Culture: How the Fringe Became Mainstream; and Praeger's three-volume American History through American Sports.