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"By the Shore"
Galaxy Craze's debut novel is a hushed and tentative affair.

By Charles Taylor
[05/24/99]

Ivory Tower
The long Rhodes home
Hiding from the Oxford mafia and everyone's stratospheric expectations, a young Rhodes scholar takes the hardest class of all: life.

By Carrie La Seur
[05/24/99]

Reviews
"Why We Buy"
Paco Underhill examines the sociology and psychology of the consumerist impulse -- and comes up with a few surprises.

By Todd Pruzan
[05/21/99]

Ivory Tower
Must dog eat dog?
After preaching that humans live by animal laws of aggression and selfishness, evolutionary psychologists are finding the animal kingdom is not as brutal as they imagined.

By Susan McCarthy
[05/21/99]


The phantom manuscript
"Ulysses 1" fever is blooming all over as stores prepare for an onslaught of Joyce fans.

By Wes Tooke
[05/20/99]

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Updike in love
The author of "Rabbit, Run" picks the five greatest novels about romance.

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By John Updike

May 24, 1999 | Loving by Henry Green
An English estate in Ireland during World War II lyrically houses amorous doings among both masters and servants.

Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert
A young bourgeois wife seeks spiritual and sexual fulfillment away from the marital bed and runs grievously into debt.

The Princesse de Clèves by Madame de Lafayette
A long extramarital attraction is consummated by the heroine’s announcement that the way to keep love alive is not to marry.

Les Liaisons Dangereuses by Choderlos de Laclos
Polymorphous seduction and betrayal among the terminally jaded 18th century aristocracy: an epistolary novel.

The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne
Among the Puritan pioneers of Boston, a promising clergyman falls afoul of a dark-haired proto-feminist and her wizardly older husband.
salon.com | May 24, 1999

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About the writer
John Updike is the author of 18 novels, including most recently, "Bech at Bay: A Quasi-Novel."

Table Talk
Romeo & Juliet? Old Yeller? What's your nomination for the greatest love story of all

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