Nonfiction
John Updike’s final words
A posthumous collection of essays revelas a different side of the acclaimed and prolific author
No American writer educated himself quite so publicly as John Updike. Prompted by a “dim sense that the humanities and arts need repeated injections of amateurism,” Updike swabbed our arms and gave us the shot monthly. Over four decades he reviewed hundreds of books for the New Yorker and dozens upon dozens of art shows for the New York Review, and he would riff on just about anything for anyone: physics, aging, golf, pennies, photographs, humor, new Chinese writing, how to make a football. He was available, and he was game. Even the AARP newsletter and Massachusetts Golfing Association can call him a contributor.
Every eight or so years Updike compiled these literary errands into a book. They were fat volumes and grew fatter with time, his genial, apologetic prefaces conveying a wide array of excuses for their over-muchness: his Depression Era-born attitude about money, an alimony payment that was “his to make,” curiosity. Updike is not here to aw-shucks over this latest, posthumously published collection, “Higher Gossip,” assembled by Christopher Carduff, but if he were, one imagines he might talk a little bit about aging.
This is not an elderly man’s book, but it is close. The collection begins with a note about touring bookstores in his 70s, and it ends with a brief essay on the sustaining fires of his conflicted Christianity. In between, Updike does what grandparents do. He dives into an increasing number of biographies, eulogizes close friends, and complains about the size of crowds at gallery shows. His generosity and forbearance — which gave his reviews their silken coziness — occasionally falter and a temper flares.
“Toni Morrison has a habit, perhaps traceable to the pernicious influence of William Faulkner, of plunging into the narrative before the reader has a clue to what is going on,” Updike writes in a testy review of the Nobel laureate’s “A Mercy.” “In the age of retirement,” he writes, in a hilarious piece about wintering in Arizona, “we say what we think and ask what we wish.”
It’s a pleasure to encounter this slightly less genteel Updike on the page. Criticism, after all, is often about a collision between sense and sensibility. Updike’s weakness as a critic was that he could be too dutiful, and rather than convey frustration, he would bury the reader in the cotton wool of regurgitated research. “Higher Gossip,” which collects some 170 pages of art reviews, features some striking examples of how excruciatingly boring it could be to follow Updike around a museum when he couldn’t commit to really disliking something.
Updike’s greatest skill — his genius — was in praising, in looking with a kind of devotional attention to the everyday world, and while “Higher Gossip” is marred by some too-kind reviewing, it also happily includes many examples of this brighter side of Updike’s register. There are some familiar affinities — golf and baseball, early American drawing and Edith Wharton — but some surprising ones, too. “Of Carver’s stories,” he writes in a stirring eulogy of the American short story writer, “it must be said they are beautiful. Not since Hemingway, perhaps, has anyone built so lovingly in stacks of plain sentences.” With photographs by Joel Meyerowitz and Robert Polidori of ground zero and New Orleans, respectively, the historic “record is indeed enhanced, for posterity to consult, and to use in ways we cannot imagine.”
This is a large book, and Updike’s prose makes music most of the time. In a piece on surrealism he remarks that “the overturning of conventionality becomes as boring as conventionality.” The preface to a reissued version of his first novel, “The Poorhouse Fair,” contains this gem: “The novel of the future seeks to give us in concentrated form the taste of time that flavors all novels, that makes their events more portentous than events of our own lives, where time passes unnoticed, but for the rare shudder, and the mechanical schedule.”
It was easy to assume that Updike’s voice — so ubiquitous, for so long — would bend the laws of time and continue appearing in the New Yorker forever. “Higher Gossip” reminds those of us who felt this way how foolish we were. Yes, this book could do without the essays on golf, and does it really need to reprint prefaces, the unfunny satirical dialogues? Still, if their inclusion here is the tariff we must pay for another encounter with Updike’s fierce, devotional mind — to read his brilliant description of a football being made at a factory in Ohio — it is small change indeed.
John Freeman has written about books and culture for the Village Voice, Time Out New York and the San Francisco Bay Guardian. He lives in New York. More John Freeman.
“Why won’t you answer me?”
Kids' questions may be annoying -- but they're more crucial to learning than we've ever thought. An expert explains
(Credit: Bonita R. Cheshier via Shutterstock) Children can ask a lot of very annoying questions. Starting at about 2 years of age, they begin barraging their parents with endless queries, from “Are we there yet?” to “Why is the moon round?” — questions that often seem more like desperate ploys for parental attention than anything else. And, to make things worse, cooperative parents are often treated to a relentless barrage of follow-up questions, many of which involve one word: “Why?” Is this process infuriating? Yes. But is it crucial to their development? Far more than most of us think. And furthermore, the frequency and form of those questions can tell us a lot, not only about how children learn but also about cultural and class differences in America.
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Thomas Rogers is Salon's Arts Editor. More Thomas Rogers.
“Farther Away”: Franzen on Wallace
In a new essay collection, "Freedom's" author reflects on his best friend's suicide with betrayal, anger and sorrow
Jonathan Franzen wants you to like him. In “Mr. Difficult,” a 2002 New Yorker essay, Franzen identifies two types of authorship: the Status model, devoted to the pursuit of difficult art at the expense of commercial gain, and the Contract model, which privileges the enjoyment and connectedness of the reader. Franzen is, in his own estimation, “a Contract kind of person.” His novels don’t ask more of the reader than she is willing to give in turn. “[T]o build the reader an uncomfortable house you wouldn’t want to live in: this violates what seems to me the categorical imperative for any fiction writer.”
Continue Reading Close“When women were birds”: Reading blank journals
A writer makes sense of the rows of empty cloth-bound diaries her mother left her
If you are a reader who cares about nature, wilderness, our place in nature, writing and nature, how to choose a course of action when something you care about is threatened, the lifelong search for voice, and what it means to be a woman in this world, you will have crossed paths with the work of Terry Tempest Williams. Perhaps you grew up reading Aldo Leopold, John Muir, Edward Abbey, Gary Snyder and Bill McKibben and, loving their work, still felt something missing — that your relationship with these issues was not fully rendered. Then you discovered Williams, and, not unlike Alfred Stieglitz’s famous response when he first saw Georgia O’Keeffe’s paintings, you might have breathed: “At last! A woman on paper!”
Continue Reading Close“Drop Dead Healthy”: A failed addition to “shtick lit”
In a book about one man's "quest for bodily perfection," the author doesn't even bother to try
In “Memoir: A History,” Ben Yagoda defines “shtick lit” as “[b]ooks perpetrated by people who undertook an unusual project with the express purpose of writing about it.” He identifies “Walden” as the earliest example of the genre, which would seem to establish a respectable pedigree, but the word perpetrated leaves little doubt as to Yagoda’s opinion of more recent efforts. He can’t be alone in casting a skeptical eye on shtick-lit superstar A. J. Jacobs, the Esquire writer responsible for “The Know-It-All” (shtick: reading the “Encyclopaedia Britannica” in its entirety), “The Year of Living Biblically” (shtick: following every biblical injunction to the letter for 12 lushly bearded, annoying months), and now “Drop Dead Healthy,” evidently a reboot of Remar Sutton’s out-of-print “Body Worry.”
Continue Reading Close“A Slave in the White House”: James Madison and his slaves
A new biography focuses on an overlooked part of the president's life: His perplexing relationship with slavery
When James Madison died, he still owned about 100 slaves. He freed none of them, not even Paul Jennings, his valet. Jennings could read and write, and in fact published the first White House memoir, declaring that Madison was “one of the best men who ever lived.” Modern biographers of Madison, such as Richard Brookhiser and Jeff Broadwater, have frankly acknowledged the shocking truth that such a politically astute and sensitive founding father utterly failed to address the problem of slavery seriously. But most, including not only Mr. Brookhiser and Mr. Broadwater, but also Kevin R. C. Gutzman, Andrew Burstein, and Nancy Isenberg, treat the issue of slavery as a thing apart, in separate chapters, instead dealing with the place of the “peculiar institution” in Madison’s life in the years after he left the presidency.
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