When the book was first published, it shocked many readers with its explicit descriptions of sexuality, and according to Robert Detweiler in John Updike, some reviewers even speculated that Updike wrote a scandalous novel on purpose to capture the attention of the reading public. Set in Brewer, Pennsylvania, a fictional counterpart of the real-life city of Reading, Rabbit, Run examines the experiences of a young man who is trapped in an unfulfilling life and his equally unfulfilling attempts to leave his family and find a new life. Sexist, dumb, lazy, illiterate (he spends the whole novel not finishing a book on American history), a terrible father … an inadequate husband, an unreliable lover, a tiresome lecher, a failing businessman, a cowardly patient, a typically "territorial" male: What kind of moral vantage point is this?īut, she writes, "What redeems Rabbit is that, inside his brutish exterior, he is tender, feminine, and empathetic." "Who likes Rabbit, apart from his author?" Hermione Lee asks in The New Republic.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |