More Matter: Essays and CriticismRandom House Publishing Group, 19 февр. 2009 г. - Всего страниц: 928 In this collection of nonfiction pieces, John Updike gathers his responses to nearly two hundred invitations into print, each “an opportunity to make something beautiful, to find within oneself a treasure that would otherwise remain buried.” Introductions, reviews, and humorous essays, paragraphs on New York, religion, and lust—here is “more matter” commissioned by an age that, as the author remarks in his Preface, calls for “real stuff . . . not for the obliquities and tenuosities of fiction.” Still, the novelist’s shaping hand, his gift for telling detail, can be detected in many of these literary considerations. Books by Edith Wharton, Dawn Powell, John Cheever, and Vladimir Nabokov are incisively treated, as are biographies of Isaac Newton, Abraham Lincoln, Queen Elizabeth II, and Helen Keller. As George Steiner observed, Updike writes with a “solicitous, almost tender intelligence. The critic and the poet in him . . . are at no odds with the novelist; the same sharpness of apprehension bears on the object in each of Updike’s modes.” |
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Стр. xxi
... became Tina Brown . It has been my bewildering professional experience to see the editors of that revered journal go from being much older , wiser heads , gray and authoritative , with a shamanistic mystique , to being all — with the ...
... became Tina Brown . It has been my bewildering professional experience to see the editors of that revered journal go from being much older , wiser heads , gray and authoritative , with a shamanistic mystique , to being all — with the ...
Стр. 13
... became not merely an energizer but the only idea in the field . The con- cepts of equality and freedom are bound up together . De Tocqueville thought , citing the equally oppressed citizens of a tyranny , that you can have equality ...
... became not merely an energizer but the only idea in the field . The con- cepts of equality and freedom are bound up together . De Tocqueville thought , citing the equally oppressed citizens of a tyranny , that you can have equality ...
Стр. 26
... became unbearably so in Vietnam fifteen years later ; in Korea , however , both sides accepted stalemate . MacArthur had wanted to go for an old - fashioned all - out vic- tory , but Truman , confrontational though he was on the home ...
... became unbearably so in Vietnam fifteen years later ; in Korea , however , both sides accepted stalemate . MacArthur had wanted to go for an old - fashioned all - out vic- tory , but Truman , confrontational though he was on the home ...
Стр. 33
... became such an outlet , a ritual sublimation . For the male , the opportunity to put at least one of his arms around a female , inhaling her perfume , feeling her body brush against his and her palm moisten in his grip , was its own ...
... became such an outlet , a ritual sublimation . For the male , the opportunity to put at least one of his arms around a female , inhaling her perfume , feeling her body brush against his and her palm moisten in his grip , was its own ...
Стр. 34
... became an excuse for her greater suppleness and grace to display itself , to discover itself , in dancing . It is Ginger Rogers's trailing boas and shimmering gowns that stick in the mind as tokens of an indescribable pleasure . We ...
... became an excuse for her greater suppleness and grace to display itself , to discover itself , in dancing . It is Ginger Rogers's trailing boas and shimmering gowns that stick in the mind as tokens of an indescribable pleasure . We ...
Содержание
16 | |
22 | |
30 | |
37 | |
46 | |
THE BURGLAR ALARM 220 | 72 |
THE GLITTERING CITY | 79 |
GEOGRAPHICAL CALENDRICAL TOPICAL | 97 |
Babies by Mary Steichen Calderone and Edward Steichen | 684 |
Updike and I | 757 |
Introduction to SelfSelected Stories | 767 |
Foreword to Brother Grasshopper | 773 |
Note on My Father on the Verge of Disgrace | 776 |
Note for an Exhibit of New Yorker Cartoons | 787 |
Christmas Cards | 797 |
Reflections on Radio | 803 |
INTRODUCTIONS | 139 |
AMERICAN PAST MASTERS | 214 |
PHOTOS | 266 |
NORTH AMERICAN CONTEMPORARIES | 291 |
OVERSEAS | 338 |
OTHER CONTINENTS | 397 |
MEDLEYS | 434 |
THINGS AS THEY | 571 |
MOVIES | 641 |
Accepting the Bobst Award | 810 |
Introduction to the Easton Press Edition of the Rabbit Novels | 816 |
Special Message for the Franklin Library Edition of Memories | 825 |
Special Message for the Franklin Library Edition | 832 |
Foreword to the French Translation of Facing Nature | 838 |
Index | 857 |
65 | 868 |
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Age of Innocence American artist beautiful become Benito Cereno body burglar alarm called cartoons celebrity century characters Cheever color comic dance dark Dawn Powell death decades dreams E. B. White Edith Wharton English eyes face father feel fiction film Fitzgerald girl golf Green happy Hawthorne Herman Melville hero heroine Hollywood human imagination innocent John John Cheever Lana Turner less letters light literary live look magazine male married Melville Melville's Mickey Mickey Mouse Moby-Dick mother movie never night novel once painting perhaps Philip Roth photographs play poems prose published reader Sarah Goodridge Scott Fitzgerald seems sense sexual short stories social Street television tells thing thought tion turned voice Wharton wife woman women words writing wrote York Yorker young