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- <text id=94TT1587>
- <title>
- Nov. 14, 1994: Books:Doglegs of Decrepitude
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Nov. 14, 1994 How Could She Do It?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARTS & MEDIA/BOOKS, Page 96
- Doglegs of Decrepitude
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> John Updike's fine new book of stories looks at boys grown old
- </p>
- <p>By Paul Gray
- </p>
- <p> John Updike's first collection of short stories, The Same Door,
- appeared in 1959. Depending on how his voluminous work is categorized,
- he has produced either five, seven or nine such collections
- since then. (Don't ask; it gets complicated.) In any case, with
- The Afterlife and Other Stories (Knopf; 316 pages; $24), Updike
- enters a fifth decade of turning out new short fiction, and
- neither he nor his stories seem any the worse for wear.
- </p>
- <p> The same, however, cannot be said of the people within these
- tales. Almost to a man--and yes, for those readers to whom
- such things matter, the points of view here are exclusively
- male--they have seen better days. Their names vary--Carter
- Billings, Fred Emmet, Geoffrey Parrish, and so forth throughout
- 22 stories--but they all share similar characteristics and
- complaints. They are well-to-do, approaching 60 or edgily leaving
- it behind; most have second wives (or third, or multiples thereof)
- and a clutch of grown children who have become more or less
- strangers to them. Sexual passion for these duffers-in-waiting
- is largely a matter of fond remembrance. To them, pleasure has
- come to mean European vacations, accompanied by a younger spouse
- who gripes about their erratic driving, or a week away with
- the old boys. The hero of Farrell's Caddie goes to Scotland
- with some of his golfing cronies, seeking the invigoration of
- actually walking the course rather than, as he does at his club
- back home, riding an electric cart and feeling resigned "to
- a golfing mediocrity that would poke its way down the sloping
- dogleg of decrepitude to the level green of death." In a mysterious
- way, Farrell's quest is rewarded. His local caddie hands him
- a club and suggests, in passing, that he leave his wife back
- in the U.S.: "She never was yer type. Tae proper." Rattled,
- Farrell responds, "Shouldn't this be a wedge?"
- </p>
- <p> This preternatural, comic exchange typifies the sort of redemptive
- elation offered by nearly every story in The Afterlife. Updike's
- heroes may--and do--regularly pine for what they have lost.
- Three stories--A Sandstone Farmhouse, The Other Side of the
- Street and The Black Room--play variations on the same theme:
- aging men return to the neighborhood or the very home of their
- happy childhood, where they find themselves confronting evidence
- of their own transiency in space and time.
- </p>
- <p> But not all is nostalgia; even the most unpromising of present
- moments can yield something worth remembering. In Short Easter,
- a character named Fogel spends a dull holiday Sunday, lacking
- an hour thanks to the arrival of daylight savings time, enduring
- a brunch and some enforced lawn care with his wife. Alone for
- a while, he turns on the TV and finds some golf: "The tour had
- moved east from the desert events, with lavender mountains in
- the background and emerald fairways imposed upon sand and cactus
- and with ancient Hollywood comedians as tournament sponsors,
- to courses in the American South, with trees in tender first
- leaf and azaleas in lurid bloom." Fogel may not fully appreciate
- his own perception of spring's arrival, but Updike's readers
- will; these stories are exemplars of narrative skill and descriptive
- generosity.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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