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- <text id=93HT0369>
- <title>
- 1960s: Authors: View from the Catacombs:John Updike
- </title>
- <history>Time-The Weekly Magazine-1960s Highlights</history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TIME Magazine
- April 26, 1968
- Authors: View from the Catacombs
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> In this peaceful town, pretty birds sing and the sumac
- twines. Along the edge of the mothering sea stand colonial
- cottages reaped from the wasted fields of the American
- Revolution and threshed into 20th century quaintness. Church
- steeples point for all to see toward the virtuous life. Railroad
- tracks dwindle northward towards Boston, an unconcerned hour
- away. This is Tarbox, Mass., the setting of John Updike's new
- novel Couples, where primitive American democracy reveals itself
- in town meetings, and three streets of the business district are
- named Hope, Charity and Divinity.
- </p>
- <p> As in many such communities, the good citizens of Tarbox
- accept health, wealth and wisdom as natural perquisites of their
- membership in the American middle class. Tarbox is a fun place
- too. Almost any Sunday, one can find a bunch of the fellows
- tossing around a basketball in somebody's driveway, while the
- women chat and watch and the children scramble and squabble.
- There's likely to be a spirited game of tennis at John and
- Bernadette Ong's place, followed by a few tall, cold vodka-and-
- tonics perhaps at Matt and Terry Gallagher's. The women can be
- depended upon to keep the co-op nursery school running smoothly.
- And thank heavens for Irene Saltz, without whose all-fired
- energy Tarbox would never have achieved such an effective
- League of Women Voters or Fair Housing Group. Quiet, lovely
- town, Tarbox. Or so is seems.
- </p>
- <p> Permutations. The fact that beneath this suburban idyl,
- Updike's couples are caught up in a black mass of community sex.
- Their Puritan gods have retreated to unawesome, half-deserted
- churches, where beaten clergymen, sizing up the businessman
- congregations, croak about an improbable Christ who "offers us
- present security, four-and-a-half percent compounded every
- quarter." The Biblical woman accused of adultery would be safe
- in Tarbox; here no stones are thrown, only envious glances. With
- no heat left in the Protestant American crucible, the
- comfortable couples of Tarbox have reached out for another kind
- of warmth. Updike is forthright about his purpose. "There's a
- lot of dry talk around about love and sex being somehow the new
- ground of our morality," he said recently. "I thought I should
- show the ground and ask, is it entirely to be wished for?"
- </p>
- <p> Show the ground he certainly does. Harold Smith is bedding
- down with Janet Appleby, and Marcia Smith with Frank Appleby;
- their set calls them the Applesmiths. Eddie Constantine and
- Irene Saltz make it together, and so do Ben Saltz and Carol
- Constantine; they are the Saltines. As for Piet Hanema, call him
- insatiable; he expands the permutations by sleeping with
- Georgene Thorne, Bea Guerin, Carol Constantine and especially
- Foxy Whitman. The sexual scenes, and the language that
- accompanies them, are remarkably explicit, even for this new age
- of total freedom of expression. Some critics have dismissed
- Couples as an upper-middle-class Peyton Place. It isn't, but it
- is getting a sensational reception all the same. Only three
- weeks after publication, the novel is on the bestseller lists.
- Knopf ordered a huge first printing of 70,000 copies, and
- Hollywood's Wolper Productions paid $500,000 for the movie
- rights.
- </p>
- <p> Elegiac Concern. Despite the heavy breathing on all sides,
- Updike in Couples is really only reworking the territory that he
- has claimed for his own since he made his first appearance as a
- New Yorker short-story writer 15 years ago. In his own words, he
- is "kind of elegiacally concerned with the Protestant middle
- class." Among modern American writers, only John Cheever shares
- Updike's sense of accumulated loss, his feeling that the
- national past contained a wholeness and an essential goodness
- that have now evaporated. Even John O'Hara, an acknowledged
- social historian, makes no plea for the special virtues of the
- past. For other novelists, the present may be a disaster, but
- there is no indication that things ever were any better. When
- they do turn to the antecedents--John Barth in The Sot-Weed
- Factor or William Styron in The Confessions of Nat Turner--it
- is only to show that America has been headed for catastrophe
- right from the start.
- </p>
- <p> Updike sees not catastrophe but an approach to fulfillment
- in past American experience, and his earlier work was a fond
- evocation of its elemental struggles, its integral faith and its
- microcosmic triumphs. In Couples, this elegy is modulated into
- a lament for the pampered, wayward millions of today. "America
- is like an unloved child smothered in candy," says Piet
- Hanema. "God doesn't love us any more. He loves Russia. He
- loves Uganda. We're fat and full of pimples and always whining
- for more candy. We've fallen from grace."
- </p>
- <p> At 36, Updike may have found in the hedonistic couples of
- Tarbox the explosive expression of his theme that his work has
- always lacked. His four earlier novels--The Poorhouse Fair;
- Rabbit, Run; The Centaur; Of the Farm--were praised, sometimes
- extravagantly, as the work of a man who was surely destined to
- write a "major" novel. The trouble was that he was too much the
- poet, too much the pointillistic stylist, too self-concerned
- with scenes, images and feelings sensed in a severely limited
- autobiographical world. He was justly accused of hiding behind
- his family and childhood, of not daring the larger, extra-
- domestic themes that his technical prowess promised, or
- conversely, of trying to inflate his tiny genre scenes into
- balloons of cosmic significance. Updike, wrote Critic John
- Aldridge, "has nothing to say," while Leslie Fiedler complains,
- "He writes essentially 19th century novels. He's irrelevant."
- </p>
- <p> Couples is flawed by overwriting and undercharacterization,
- but the charge of irrelevance will no longer stand up. Updike
- has taken a particularly American theme, and a highly topical
- one. One character sums it up thus: "We're a subversive cell,
- like in the catacombs. Only they were trying to break out of
- hedonism. We're trying to break back into it. It's not easy."
- </p>
- <p> Nymphs & Satyrs. Trapped in their cozy catacombs, the
- couples have made sex by turns their toy, their glue, their
- trauma, their therapy, their hope, their frustration, their
- revenge, their narcotic, their main line of communication and
- their sole and pitiable shield against the awareness of death.
- Adultery, says Updike, has become a kind of "imaginative quest"
- for a successful hedonism that would enable man to enjoy an
- otherwise meaningless life. But to seek pleasure is not
- necessarily to find it.
- </p>
- <p> The couples of Tarbox live in a place and time that
- together seem to have been ordained for this quest. "Welcome,"
- says Georgene Thorne, "to the postpill paradise." Leisure, cars
- and babysitters give them the mobility to track any pleasure.
- Only the children tie the couples to what used to be called
- adult responsibilities, and even they are occasionally trundled
- about from bed to bed to make room for their elders. "All these
- goings-on would be purely lyrical, like nymphs and satyrs in a
- grove," said Updike recently, "except for the group of
- distressed and neglected children."
- </p>
- <p> Lyrical is not the final word for the desperate tribal
- rites that come to consume the lives of the couples. At the
- novel's outset they are merely a gang of friends who, like so
- many small town sets, see rather too much of one another. They
- gather for endless whiskey-driven parties by night, spend their
- weekends playing games. They gossip in the faintly malicious,
- secretly thrilled saxophone tones of bourgeois life.
- </p>
- <p> Most of the gossip concerns Piet Hanema, red-haired,
- stocky, 35-year-old father of two girls, housebuilder and
- restorer, a man "in love with snug, right-angled things." He is
- at once the sturdiest and the most pathetic character in
- Couples, a quasi-Christian and would-be family planner who finds
- real joy in such things as "the children's choir's singing,
- an unsteady theft of melody." His adventures in adultery are an
- almost accidental byproduct of his own spiritual confusion, his
- wife's complicated sexual indifference and the irresistible why-
- not willingness of the women around him. "Georgene had brought
- to their affair, like a dowry of virginal lace, this lightness,
- this guiltlessness." Piet responds not to the excitement but to
- the wondrous ease of it all, the astonishing luxury of
- fornication with eager women behind bedroom walls apparently
- opaque to the fierce eye of his Calvinist God.
- </p>
- <p> Tut-Tutty. Less starry-eyed than Piet, the other couples
- also began to ease themselves into each other's beds--some out
- of boredom, some for revenge, some because they find nothing
- forbidden, and others because in the past too much has been
- forbidden. Over the whole group hovers the satanic, death
- worshipping Freddy Thorne. He is a dentist by trade, but in
- fact he is a faithless St. Augustine indulging his "hyena
- appetite for dirty truths" in his role as Updike's designated
- "priest" to the tribe. "He thinks we're a magic circle of heads
- to keep the night out," says Angela Hanema. "He thinks we've
- made a church of one another."
- </p>
- <p> They very nearly have. Half from choice, half from unspoken
- fear, the couples herd together like sheep in a storm. During
- the time of the novel--mid-1963 to mid-1964--the life of the
- town reached into them only in minor ways, and the life of the
- world beyond Tarbox is noted by the author rather than the
- characters (as upper-middle-class people did in those days, they
- joke about White House philandering).
- </p>
- <p> The news of John Kennedy's assassination touches them all--but very much in their own way. Freddy Thorne hears it over
- the radio in his dental office. "You hear that?" says Freddy.
- "Some crazy Texan. You may spit." A few minutes later, J.F.K.
- is dead, and Freddy thinks of canceling his party that night.
- "But I've bought the booze!" he says.
- </p>
- <p> The party goes on, a grisly set piece pointing up the
- couples' encapsulation. The coupes act as ever, drinking too
- much, gossiping about the affairs already begun and negotiating
- arrangements for the next. Harold Smith tells of how he and
- "three of my most Republican associates" were having lunch when
- the news came. "Well naturally everyone assumed that a right-
- wing crackpot had done it." he says. "We were all very pious and
- tut-tutty. Then young Ed called up absolutely ecstatic and
- said. `Did you hear? It wasn't one of ours, it was one of
- theirs!'" And the party goes on.
- </p>
- <p> The Ritual. Freddy's dirty truths and Piet's butterfly
- adulteries converge with the arrival in Tarbox of Foxy Whitman
- and her husband Ken, a biochemist preoccupied with his own
- second-rateness. Alone of the women, Foxy seems unafraid of what
- Freddy calls "the smell and hurt of love"; seven years of
- childless boredom with Ken have made her vulnerable. Now, though
- she is pregnant, she and Piet Hanema fall in love, an old-
- fashioned and banal assertion of life that brings down on them
- and the tribe the old-fashioned and banal tribulations of
- middle-class guilt, entrapment and helplessness.
- </p>
- <p> After the Whitman baby is born, Foxy gets pregnant by Piet.
- In panic, they turn to Freddy Thorne for help in finding an
- abortionist. There follows a rather absurd turn of plot that
- seems straight out of 19th century melodrama. All but twirling
- his mustachios, Freddy agrees--in return for a night alone
- with Piet's wife Angela, the one woman in the tribe who has
- never entered the communal bed. Implausibly, Angela consents.
- One night in a ski lodge, after the Thornes and the Hanemas have
- had too much to drink, Angela suddenly says, "Well, is this the
- night?" Georgene Thorne, helpless, furious, goes to her room.
- Angela busses Piet fondly and prepares to go upstairs with
- Thorne. "Freddy," says Piet, "should you get your toothbrush or
- anything?"
- </p>
- <p> The rest of the ritual plays itself out almost mechanically:
- Foxy's fetus is aborted, the Whitmans and the Hanemas get
- divorced. Piet and Foxy marry and move away. The remaining
- couples take up bridge, their place in the town having been
- quietly usurped by a younger crowd that "held play readings, and
- kept sex in its place, and experimented with LSD." Toward the
- end, Updike provides a fortissimo blast of obvious symbolism;
- the Congregational Church goes up in a apocalyptic fire that
- leaves untouched only the old tin weathercock, riding high
- over the gutted house of God.
- </p>
- <p> So much for paradise. In Updike's ironic words, "it's a
- happy-ending book--everybody gets what he wants." The kicker,
- of course, is that "getting it is just as frustrating as not
- getting it." and the would-be hedonists retreat in defeat from
- their obsessive adulteries.
- </p>
- <p> For Piet Hanema alone, the chase into neighborly beds comes
- close to the course of tragedy. Unlike the others, he is hounded
- not only by lust, curiosity and boredom but by a terrible sense
- of time fleeing. He is haunted by the past, by "shepherds
- paralyzed in webs of lead" in his boyhood Dutch Reformed Church,
- by his father's rough hands tending the fragile flowers in his
- greenhouse, most of all by his parents' death in an automobile
- accident. ("Piet pictured shattered glass strewn across the road
- and saw snow continue to descend, sparkling in the policeman's
- whirling lights.") Death for Piet is not a future moment in
- time; it is time itself, and life is what Updike calls "a series
- of little losses" leading toward the dry well. Piet fights death
- by trying to turn time around, to recapture the past, to make
- manifest the heaven of nostalgia.
- </p>
- <p> Updike has found a tantalizing metaphor for his quest in
- the legend of Iseult--the unattainable woman who vanishes at
- the instant she is possessed. "What is it that shines from
- Iseult's face but our own past, with its strange innocence and
- its strange need to be redeemed?" he wrote in an essay in 1963.
- "What is nostalgia but love for that part of ourselves which is
- in Heaven, forever removed from change and corruption? A woman,
- loved, momentarily eases the pain of time by localizing
- nostalgia: the vague and irrecoverable objects of nostalgic
- longing are assimilated, under the pressure of libidinous
- desire, into the details of her person."
- </p>
- <p> Alone of the characters in Couples, Piet is married to
- Iseult--the unreachable Angela, who cannot yield to him
- although she recognizes him as "the only person who ever tried
- to batter through to me." Life with Angela thus becomes for Piet
- an unbearable nostalgia, embodied in her, and his salvation
- comes down to a matter of attempting to tolerate the
- intolerable. They are "ordained for divorce," says Updike, and
- their submission is a acknowledgement of death's approach.
- </p>
- <p> Horrid Little Man. Updike posses uneven skill as a
- manipulator or impersonator of characters. For more than half
- the book it is virtually impossible to tell the characters apart
- or to remember who is sleeping with whom, except by drawing a
- chart. (The generous explanation is that this is not due to the
- author's lack of craftsmanship, but rather that it represents
- a deliberate attempt to show the dreary interchangeability of the
- adulterers.) The novel is seen largely through Piet's
- intelligence and sensibilities. Most of the other male
- characters are unreal, merely equipped with identifying jobs and
- stigmata. Updike paints Foxy and Angela full-length and achieves
- an equal effect in far fewer brush strokes with Marcia and
- Janet, two of the husband swappers. The trouble is that with
- some minor differences, he seems to have used the same woman as
- model for them all--a well-meaning, even-tempered, sexually
- adept American frau, with not a bitch or a shrew, a man-hater
- or child-worshipper in the crowd.
- </p>
- <p> As for the celebrated Updike prose style, it is present in
- all its gradations, which is to say that it ranges from the
- exquisite to the embarrassing. At its best, Updike's writing
- flows with an unforgettable, lilting legato: "October's orange
- ebbed in the marshes; they stretched dud grey to the far rim of
- sand." The talk of a husband and wife in bed at night, speaking
- of their children or their friends, evokes in tone and languor
- the bedroom conversation familiar to all parents. In the
- Guerins' home, guests move through "a low varnished hallway
- where on a mock cobbler's bench their coats and hats huddle like
- a heap of the uninvited." Houses have windows whose panes are
- "flecked with oblong bubbles and tinged with lavender." A
- television screen's "icy brilliance implies a universe of
- profound cold beyond the war encirclement of Tarbox, friends and
- family."
- </p>
- <p> And then, at times, Updike's virtuosity leads to excess
- that smothers meaning and clogs the reader's senses, as when he
- writes of "the shallow amber depths where the lemon slice like
- an embryo swam." That is a bowl of soup.
- </p>
- <p> His descriptive splurges seem old-fashioned at a time when
- most writers are still either in thrall to Hemingway's ideal of
- verbal simplicity of overflowing with a new kind of personal,
- revival-meeting combustion that lies somewhere between
- caterwauling and glossolalia. But prose style is one of the
- minor differences between Updike and his contemporaries. The
- larger fact is that, however valid his own objectives and
- achievements, he has ignored the mainstream of contemporary
- Western fiction. The French, in the roman nouveau, have reduced
- the novel to a random series of received sounds and images; the
- English are tearing apart seven centuries of established order.
- </p>
- <p> The Americans, meanwhile, have adopted comedy as their tool
- and social alienation and absurdity as their twin themes. Nearly
- every important American writer--Nabokov, Mailer, Barth,
- Bellow, Malamud, Donleavy, Roth, Friedman, Burroughs, Heller,
- Pynchon, Willingham--works from an assumption that society is
- at best malevolent and stupid, at worst wholly lunatic. The gods
- are dead and their graves untended, morality is a matter of
- picking one's way between competing absurdities, and the only
- sane reaction to society--to its alleged truths and virtues,
- its would-be terrors and taboos--is a cackle or a scream of
- possibly cathartic laughter. Sex in particular is the target,
- and the black humorists especially have been stripping away its
- pretensions to holiness, love, mystery and galactic consequence.
- </p>
- <p> Dionysian Yelps. It would be hard to exaggerate how far
- removed Updike is from this view of the world as lunatic comedy.
- He dares to hope for both the reality of God and the sanity of
- society, and he sees sex not as a target but as a sanctuary.
- Scenes that other writers would play as burlesque, Updike plays
- straight, no matter how absurd they are. In Couples, for
- example, Piet and Foxy have huddles in an upstairs bathroom
- during the Kennedy night party. Her breasts are milk-laden after
- the birth of her baby. "Nurse me!" begs Piet. Foxy consents, but
- moments later, Angela knocks at the door. In panic, Piet jumps
- out of the window to the ground two floors below. The author
- never even winks.
- </p>
- <p> This earnestness in the face of farce is of a piece with
- Updike's general reverence toward sex. His contemporaries invade
- the ground with wild Dionysian yelps, mocking both the taboos
- that would make it forbidden and the lust that drives men to it.
- Updike can be honest about it, and his descriptions of the
- sight, taste and texture of women's bodies can be perfect little
- madrigals. He celebrates Janet's "nude unity of so many shades
- of cream and pink and lilac." But too often he mixes four-letter
- words with what Norman Mailer once called the "stale garlic" of
- his lyricism (the offense being not in the four-letter words but
- in the garlic.) Occasionally, the garlic stands alone, as in
- Updike's description of a man and woman achieving climax: "So
- he did then travel through a palace of cloth and sliding
- stairways throughout the casket of perfume that she spilled upon
- him from a dozen angles, all radiant."
- </p>
- <p> Above and beyond his reverence--which extends to oral
- encounters between Piet and Foxy--looms Updike's central
- metaphor. He finds in sex an expression of his own Piet-like
- quest to recapture the past. Nostalgia suffuses him, goads him,
- at times frightens him. At home in Ipswich, Mass., Updike spends
- hours leafing through boyhood photograph albums. "I find old
- photographs powerful," he says. "There's a funny thing about the
- way the flux of time was halted at this particular spot. You
- just can't get back to it."
- </p>
- <p> Not for want of trying. The whole corpus of Updike's
- fiction before Couples amounts to a memoir of his boyhood. His
- mother called those writings "valentines" to the friends and
- family back home in the small (pop. 5,639) Pennsylvania Dutch
- farm town of Shillington, three miles from Reading, where John
- was born. His mother, Linda Grace Hoyer Updike, is a
- cosmopolitan, well-educated writer herself (four stories in the
- New Yorker since John blazed the way), and she has always
- loathed everything about Shillington. She admits now to having
- broken up a high-school romance of John's because the girl was
- "of Shillington, this place I found so contemptible."
- </p>
- <p> His mother's sense of dissolution in the small town was
- further chaffed by the Updike's poverty. When John was 13, his
- family had to move to his grandparents' 90-acre farm ten miles
- away, where John's father, Wesley, now 68, supported the five
- of them on his junior-high-school teacher's pay of $1,740 a
- year. That sum did not provide for indoor plumbing, and John and
- his father bathed at the school. It was not until twelve years
- ago that water was brought into the two-bedroom farmhouse.
- "Every time I take a bath I can't believe it." says Wesley
- Updike.
- </p>
- <p> Haunted Halls. With nudging from his mother, John's writing
- career began at the age of eight, when he sat down and pecked
- out his first story, beginning: "The tribe of Bum-Bums looked
- very solemn as they sat around their cosy cave fire." Even with
- this early start, his writing career lagged three years behind
- his parallel interest in cartooning and painting; he had had a
- collage published in a children's magazine when he was five.
- </p>
- <p> The Updikes were so poor and isolated, John recalls, that
- "in a way I've always felt estranged from the middle class--locked out of it." In one of the dozens of stories that he wrote
- about his boyhood, he describes how "the air of that house
- crystallizes: our neglected teeth, our poor and starchy diet,
- our worn floors, our musty and haunted halls." The "genius" of
- his mother, he wrote elsewhere, "was to give the people closest
- to her mythic immensity," and under her companionship,
- "consciousness of a special destiny made me both arrogant and
- shy."
- </p>
- <p> In his teens, Updike threw himself into the life at
- Shillington High School with a kind of desperado love, writing
- like a fiend, drawing like a dervish, wooing his classmates with
- methods that have remained standards to this day. Whenever he
- felt neglected or unappreciated, he took a pratfall. "I
- developed this technique," he explains, "as a way of somehow
- exorcising the evil spirits and winning approval and defying
- death--and I don't know what it all means. I spent a lot of
- time in high school throwing myself over stair railings."
- </p>
- <p> Imitations & Echoes. The technique worked so well that he
- was elected class president and editor of the school paper, the
- Chatterbox, to which he contributed countless drawings and a
- flood of articles and light verse, not the least of which was
- a poem called "Child's Question": O, is it true/ A word with Q/
- The usual U/ Does lack?/ I grunt and strain,/ But, no, in vain,/
- My weary brain/ Iraq." He also earned straight A's. His mother,
- leafing through an anthology of prizewinning short stories
- calculated that more prizewinning authors had gone to Harvard
- than anywhere else, and thereupon dispatched John to Cambridge,
- where he was given a full scholarship.
- </p>
- <p> He arrived at Harvard in the fall of 1950, scrawny, big-
- nosed, friendless, cabbage green, and lugging three scrapbooks
- of poems with their rejection slips from The New Yorker,
- Saturday Evening Post and Collier's. His four years in Cambridge
- were marked by a series of triumphs, marred only by his failure
- three times running to get accepted into Poet Archibald
- MacLeish's creative-writing seminar. He poured his energies into
- the Lampoon, the undergraduate humor magazine. At the end of his
- sophomore year, he met a fine-arts major at Radcliffe named Mary
- Pennington, two years his senior and the daughter of a Unitarian
- minister in Chicago. "I courted her essentially by falling down
- the stairs of the Fogg Museum several times," Updike recalls.
- </p>
- <p> They were married after his junior year. He graduated summa
- cum laude in English, after turning in a thesis titled "Non-
- Homerian Elements in Robert Herrick's Imitations and Echoes of
- Horace." It was a splendid college career, but in retrospect,
- Updike feels that Harvard somehow sapped him of some vague,
- irreplaceable vitality. "I feel in some obscure way ashamed of
- the Harvard years. They were a betrayal of my high school years,
- really. Harvard, in exchange for a great deal of work, made me
- a civilized man. It's somehow painful."
- </p>
- <p> Optic Nerve. After his graduation, the Updikes took a year
- just for fun at the Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Art at
- Oxford, and in time he landed a staff job with The New Yorker.
- He thought he'd be only a humorist," Mary remembers. "He didn't
- think of himself as a serious writer." Yet he spent words
- profligately in an attempt to translate his painter's eye into
- language, to catch and fix the thing seen and bring all the
- colors and shapes and textures of the visible world to bear on
- his narrative. Novelist John Barth calls Updike the "Andrew
- Wyeth of literature," adding: "I think one has the same mixture
- of admiration and reservation for the work of both."
- </p>
- <p> The sum of Updike's work is astonishing for a young man:
- to date, in addition to the novels, he has written more than 23
- articles, 24 reviews, 185 short stories and 23 poems, most of
- them appearing in The New Yorker. The poems are wry, tightly
- turned and "light"--meaning that they make their point
- comically rather than gravely, even when, as in three little
- quatrains called "Bestiary." he comments on something as complex
- as natural man's unnatural rationality. The critical and
- reportorial essays, graceful and superbly controlled, reveal an
- informed intelligence that can plunge unafraid into the rip
- currents of Vladimir Nabokov or write a better analysis of the
- nature of parody that the very good one that appeared as a
- preface to the anthology he was reviewing. And it is somehow
- endearing to know that the same hand that wrote The New Yorker's
- sane, knowledgeable review of James Joyce's recently discovered
- fragment Giacomo Joyce, also turned out the epic 1960 farewell
- to Ted Williams, Hub Fans Bid Kid Adieu.
- </p>
- <p> Swinger & Bum. After the Updikes moved to Ipswich in 1957,
- John found himself more than ever in thrall to his homeward-
- looking vision. So many short stories flowed from his reservoir
- of nostalgia that he collected eleven of the best in a volume
- called Olinger Stories--Olinger being "audibly a shadow of
- Shillington," Updike wrote, and yet something other. "The
- surrounding land is loamy, and Olinger is haunted--hexed,
- perhaps--by rural memories, accents and superstitions. It is
- beyond the western edge of Megalopolis, and hangs between its
- shallow hills enchanted, nowhere, anywhere; there is no place
- like it. Olinger is a state of mind, of my mind, and it belongs
- entirely to me."
- </p>
- <p> Updike's novels, though very much distinct from each other,
- were each rooted in the past. The Poorhouse Fair, though
- ostensibly set in New Jersey, was really drawn from the old
- folk's home near the Updike house in Shillington, and told a
- slight, whispered story of the accumulating sense of
- pointlessness among the inmates. From there, Updike leaped two
- generations to Rabbit, Run, a quietly savage novel about a
- former high school basketball star who simply runs away from
- wife, child, job and the suffocating box of senseless moral
- obligations. It was a flawlessly turned portrait of a social
- cripple who understood somehow that running, he was more alive
- than he would be standing still. It was also, says an old friend
- of Updike's, "a picture of John, if he had been a better
- basketball player and had married a home-town girl."
- </p>
- <p> The Centaur was a loving tribute to his father, an
- endearing old-style eccentric in whom Updike sees "the Protestant
- kind of goodness going down with all the guns firing--antic,
- frantic, comic, but goodness nonetheless." Though the novel is
- obscured by unnecessary buttresses of Greek mythology, the
- portrait of Wesley Updike, in all its wonderful mania, sparkles
- with life. Wesley Updike is still mentioned in hushed tones in
- Shillington for his unpredictable teaching methods. One winter
- day, he suddenly dashed out of his classroom in the middle of
- a lesson on decimals. Moments later, he reappeared with a
- handful of snow, raced to the blackboard, and triumphantly
- slammed the snowball against the spot decreed for the decimal
- point.
- </p>
- <p> The Scandal. During the past few years, Ipswich has at last
- been taking over from Shillington as the prod to Updike's
- imagination, and his short stories have abandoned their boyhood
- themes and begun to examine the years of his maturity. Like Piet
- Hanema struggling to accept his God, Updike has suffered doubts
- of his own.
- </p>
- <p> "I wouldn't want to pose as a religious thinker," he says.
- "I'm more or less a shady type improvising his way from book to
- book and trying to get up in the morning without a toothache.
- At one time I held very strongly the opinion that Paul Tillich
- and religious liberals like him were traitors in the theological
- camp because they were trying to humanize something that is
- essentially non-human. They were trying to make Christianity
- less than a scandal, as Kierkegaard called it. Well, it is a
- scandal; it's obviously a scandal because our life is a
- scandal."
- </p>
- <p> Though he was raised a Unitarian amid the Lutherans and
- Amish of south-eastern Pennsylvania, Updike joined the more
- middle-road Congregationalist Church in 1959. Then, a year
- later, as he was writing Rabbit, Run, the awareness of time
- passing pressed on him so closely that he felt a constant "sense
- of horror that beneath the skin of bright and exquisitely
- sculpted phenomena, death waits." It was a full-dress religious
- crisis lasting several months, and Updike says now that he got
- through it only by clinging to the stern, neo-orthodox theology
- of Switzerland's Karl Barth. In Barth's uncompromising view,
- reason can prove only that the nonexistence of God is absurd;
- the positive assertion, that God does exist, can come only by
- means of revelation.
- </p>
- <p> Ten Points. The crisis has passed, or, more precisely,
- evolved, into a concern over the complexities of family life.
- "There's been a lot of sin committed in the name of the family,"
- he says. "Sins on the children, sins of husband and wife to each
- other. I feel about the family as I do about the middle class,
- that it's somehow fiercer in there than has been assumed."
- </p>
- <p> It has been fierce at times for John and Mary Updike. She
- is a strong, self-contained woman with the "firm ankles" of
- Updike heroines, and many of their friends believe that he could
- not survive without her. Do Updike's many stories of tension
- suggest experiences of his own? Says he: "My marriage, like many
- others, has had its intervals of deaths and renewals."
- </p>
- <p> In the classic cliche, she is her husband's severest
- critic. "I can't think of one of my novels she's really liked,"
- says Updike. "When she read The Poorhouse Fair, she said, `Why
- do you want to write about all those old people?' After The
- Centaur, she said `You can't understand all the mythology.'
- After Of the Farm, she said `Nothing happens.' And with
- Couples, she said she felt that she was being smothered in
- pubic hair. Actually I did take some of it out."
- </p>
- <p> Updike devotes three hours a day to writing, occupying a
- cluttered room above a restaurant off the Ipswich green. At
- home, wearing tattered white sneakers, baggy pants, a turtleneck
- jersey and a shaggy haircut, he romps with his four children,
- Elizabeth, Michael, David and Miranda--or plays in a recorder
- group with Mary. On a winter morning, he might emerge from his
- 13-room white salt-box house, scoop up an armful of snow and
- heave ten decimal points against the stop sign on the corner.
- On a summer morning, he can go out to his small garden and
- properly cultivate a nice crop of lettuce. Almost any day, he
- can get into his dented 1963 Corvair, drive down to Crane's
- Beach and walk in solitude or, at low tide, drive golf balls
- along the beach.
- </p>
- <p> Clearly Couples was not drawn entirely from his
- imagination. Tarbox, says Updike, is purely fictional, "with
- only a touch of the Ipswich marshes peeking through." Still, it
- is worth noting that the Updikes are the ringleaders of a group
- if like-minded couples whom the older Ipswichers call the Junior
- Jet Set. Updike has organized endless basketball, volleyball
- and touch-football games, led the jet set on skiing trips, and
- presided over countless intramural parties. Says one member of
- the set: "What we have evolved is a ritual. It sets up a rhythm
- where we are all available to each other. It's rather as if all
- if us belong to a family." Adds another friend without
- elaboration: "You can't sustain that very long without its being
- very destructive."
- </p>
- <p> To Feel Evil. Updike heightens the historic parallels by
- writing into Piet many of his own identifying characteristics,
- from Dutch name to parlor gymnastics. "If John feels even
- slightly neglected at parties," says a friend, "He'll fall off
- the couch." In the novel, Foxy turns to Piet and says: "At first
- I thought you fell downstairs and did acrobatics to show off.
- But really, you do it to hurt yourself."
- </p>
- <p> But in the end, the novel must make its way without
- reference to its gossip quotient, and Updike knows this better
- than anyone. "Jacques Maritain somewhere says that to write
- about evil a man needn't have done evil--only felt the evil
- within himself." Updike remarks. "If people want to make a
- different conclusion, fine. If the book has passion in it, it's
- my own. I would hope that at least I have the will to put things
- down the way they are, under the assumption that there's
- something beautiful about them in any case. I think a writer has
- no choice but to deliver what goods he has."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-