updike's in A Sentence

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    It is considered the most successful novel of Updike's late career.

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    Updike's early Olinger period was set in the Pennsylvania of his youth;

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    McEwan said the Rabbit series is Updike's"masterpiece and will surely be his monument", and concluded:.

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    4

    McEwan concluded that the Rabbit series is Updike's"masterpiece and will surely be his monument", and describing it, concluded:.

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    Updike's art criticism often appeared in The New York Review of Books, where he frequently wrote about American art.

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    Of the beauty of Updike's language and his faith in the power of that language floats above reality, Wood wrote:.

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    The beauty of Updike's language and his faith in the power of that language floats above reality, according to Wood:.

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    8

    After his early novels, Updike became most famous for his chronicling infidelity, adultery, and marital unrest, especially in suburban America;

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    9

    Disch noted that because Updike was such a well-known novelist, his poetry"could be mistaken as a hobby or a foible";

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    10

    The Coupa lauded[24] novel about an African dictatorship inspired by a visit he made to Africa, found Updike working in new territory.

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    11

    In response to the cultural shifts that occurred in the United States after the September 11 attacks, Updike released Terrorist in 2006.

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    12

    Updike can be honest about it, and his descriptions of the sight, taste and texture of women's bodies can be perfect little madrigals.

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    13

    Updike found it difficult to end the book, because he was"having so much fun" in the imaginary county Rabbit and his family inhabited.

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    14

    The Coup(1978), a lauded[25] novel about an African dictatorship inspired by a visit he made to Africa, found Updike working in new territory.

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    15

    Adam Gopnik concludes that"Updike's great subject was the American attempt to fill the gap left by faith with the materials produced by mass culture.

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    16

    In Champion's interview with Updike on The Bat Segundo Show, Updike replied that he perhaps favored such imagery to concretize and make sex"real" in his prose.

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    17

    Updike stayed at The New Yorker as a full staff writer for only two years, writing"Talk of the Town" columns and submitting poetry and short stories to the magazine.

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    18

    In a novel like this, Updike insisted, you have to be generous and allow your characters eloquence,“and not chop them down to what you think is the right size”.

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    19

    Updike's memoir indicates that he stayed in his"corner of New England to give its domestic news" with a focus on the American home from the point of view of a male writer.

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    20

    Describing his subject as „the American small town, Protestant middle class”, Updike was recognized for his careful craftsmanship, his unique prose style, and his prolific output- he wrote on average a book a year.

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    Updike's highly distinctive prose style features a rich, unusual, sometimes arcane vocabulary as conveyed through the eyes of"a wry, intelligent authorial voice" that extravagantly describes the physical world, while remaining squarely in the realist tradition.

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    22

    Some have suggested that the"best statement of Updike's aesthetic comes in his early memoir'The Dogwood Tree'"(1962):"Blankness is not emptiness; we may skate upon an intense radiance we do not see because we see nothing else.

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    23

    The noted critic James Wood called Updike"a prose writer of great beauty, but that prose confronts one with the question of whether beauty is enough, and whether beauty always conveys all that a novelist must convey.".

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    24

    Updike's career and reputation were nurtured and expanded by his long association with The New Yorker, which published him frequently throughout his career, despite the fact that he had departed the magazine's employment after only two years.

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    25

    The Fiction Circus, an online and multimedia literary magazine, called Updike one of the"four Great American Novelists" of his time along with Philip Roth, Cormac McCarthy, and Don DeLillo, each jokingly represented as a sign of the Zodiac.

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    26

    Updike's career and reputation were nurtured and expanded by his long association with The New Yorker, which published him frequently throughout his lifetime of writing, despite the fact that he had departed the magazine's employment after only two years.

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    One of only three writers to win the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction more than once(the others being Booth Tarkington and William Faulkner), Updike published more than twenty novels, more than a dozen short-story collections, as well as poetry, art and.

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    28

    Although Updike's reputation rests on his complete body of work, he was first established as a major American writer upon the publication of his novel Rabbit Run(1960)- although at that date no one could have predicted the rich series of novels that would follow.

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    29

    And if you have not believed, at the end of your life you shall know you have buried your talent in the ground of this world and have nothing saved, to take into the next", demonstrating a religious, metaphysical faith present in much of Updike's work.

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