Friday, February 13, 2009

What I learned from John Updike

The first book by John Updike that I ever read was “The Centaur”. I don’t remember why I picked it up. No one I knew was reading it. Maybe a high school English teacher suggested it. In any case, I was hooked. I loved his writing, his descriptions. Evocative, I guess critics would call it. When he described a skiing trip in a short story in a collection called “Trust Me”, I could see the snow, feel the cold. My sister in law doesn’t like him. Too much description, she feels. His descriptions could run on for an entire page without a single period. I couldn’t figure out how he got away with that.

Family Safe Alert: if you are related to me, you might want to skip the next paragraph.

How did I first learn about the mechanics of sex? “Rabbit Run”, of course. Something about how “their loins joined”. That’s as close as I got at the time. “Couples” just blew me away, all that running around with people not your spouse. Infidelity was such a major theme of his, I always wondered if came from his own life. Now, when I read his obituaries and tributes, it seems he wrote about what he saw going on in the post world War II U.S. He was “chronicling” it all, not necessarily living it.

As I do with my favorite authors, I hoard their books, afraid to finish reading them all. If there are no more books to read, something will happen. Something will stop. I’m not sure exactly what’s at the end of that road—it just seems to dissolve in the distance like the arms of a pinwheel galaxy, dribbling off into space.

A few years ago, my daughter called me from a book sale in Chicago. She had stumbled across a rich vein of Louis L’Amour western novels. OK—this goes into my “secret pleasures” category, so don’t tell anyone. I love those stories, can see myself as the hero in each one. She had called to ask me which ones I needed. Yes, I keep track of the ones I’ve read. She bought a dozen or so for me and shipped them over. I treated them like Krugerrands, like the last quart of Cherry Garcia. I finally pulled the last couple out of the dusty box I had stashed in corner of the bedroom. To keep from spinning off into space, I’ll start re-reading old ones before I finish the last one from the box.

I have a big collection of Updike’s short stories in one hard bound volume, “The Early Stories”. I bought it a few years ago but never opened it. Now you know why.

I own fifteen of his novels and seven of his short story collections. “Pigeon Feathers” was the first short story collection of his I read. In one story, I think it’s in “Pigeon Feathers”, he describes breasts as scoops of vanilla ice cream. I was still in high school when I read that. Who remembers lines like that from something they read forty years ago? People like me, I guess.

I noticed that he would crank out a new novel in December each year. I knew to go to the bricks and mortar bookstore at that time to see what would be that year’s prize. I was thrilled to find first editions right there on the shelf, and I happily scooped them up.

Then I realized that the reason I could so easily buy first editions was that no one else was grabbing them first. Usually I would find the Eighth Printing of a book and be happy with that. I vaguely knew that first editions could be valuable, so I was glad to own a few. One day I discovered a bunch of first editions of “Toward the End of Time” on a remainder table. I wept.

Well, no, not there in the store and not even in the car. Still, the idea that such a master’s work would languish on the remainder table in a common bookstore was incomprehensible to me. What was wrong with people? I bought them all and put them away as investments.

The guy was so prolific, though, with dozens of novels and short stories and hundreds of reviews for The New Yorker, perhaps it’s unlikely that I will run out of Updike to read. If I actually did finish everything, I know I could just start from the beginning and feel those same feelings and see those same visions all over again. I’m kind of looking forward to that.

4 Comments:

At Friday, February 13, 2009 6:40:00 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Maybe everyone has one or two writers that really speak to them. For me, it's Anne Tyler. I'm always wishing she had written more books, because I have read all of hers several times. I hope she is still writing. It's been a while since her last book.

For me, reading John Updike when I was a teenager meant seeing a glimpse inside the minds of boys (and men who were boys). I shuddered and turned away. ;)

(I could probably handle it with aplomb now.)

 
At Saturday, February 14, 2009 1:34:00 AM, Blogger John Cowart said...

I've never read a John Updike novel.
Yet.
You've piked my curiosity.

 
At Saturday, February 14, 2009 9:08:00 PM, Blogger rabbi neil fleischmann said...

Well written post, strikes a universal chord. Thanks for writing it.

I never read Updike. Just read the excerpts in the latest new Yorker and am intrigued...

Miriam, I liked Dinner At The Homesick Restaurant a lot, and even moreso A Patchwork Planet, which I think is under appreciated.

 
At Sunday, February 22, 2009 4:09:00 PM, Blogger Rebecca said...

I remember James Michener having a similar kind of impact on me...when I would read what he wrote, I thought I was there...well, I was......
I think any author that has that kind of power has a magic pen...at least one touched by God in some way.

 

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