In my early days, my preference ran to another writer named John -- John Cheever. (Whom I still recommend highly.) I had the impression that Cheever's stories were of a higher quality than Updike's, though I had never actually read any of Updike's. I assume this judgment came from what I had absorbed about Mr. Updike through nebulous remarks gleaned from reviews and book covers: his preoccupation with sex and infidelity, drinking and New England lifestyles. Not being married myself, I had little interest in the swirling interplay of personalities that made up a couple; their infidelities especially bored me. Raised Southern Baptist, I had little interest in the rutting habits of Northern Episcopalians. That a book by Updike came to rest on my shelf is due, I'm sure, merely to a casual saunter through some used-book store and a curiosity about a writer I had no real intention of reading.
John Updike in 1989 |
It may be that if I continue reading in this collection, I'll find all the other stories are merely disappointing variations on this same theme, redundant retellings to the point of tawdriness. My instinct, however, is to give Mr. Updike at least one more chance to prove himself. Who knows? Maybe I'll even like Rabbit Run.
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