Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Pym, Barbara (Vol. 111) - John Updike (essay date 26 February 1979)
Pym, Barbara (Vol. 111) - John Updike (essay date 26 February 1979)
John Updike (essay date 26 February 1979)
SOURCE: "Lem and Pym," in The New Yorker, February 26, 1979, pp. 115-21.
[In the following excerpt, Updike comments on Pym's writing career and offers a favorable assessment of Excellent Women and Quartet in Autumn.]
Atomic aloneness in a crowded world, where life is cheap and its accidents random, can be better felt in the wanly Christian world of Barbara Pym. This English novelist has had a disheartening career. After publishing six deceptively old-fashioned novels between 1950 and 1961, she was spurned by more than twenty publishers and understandably let her pen languish. From 1946 to 1974, she supported herself as an assistant editor for the quarterly Africa. As retirement approached, however, she began to write again, a novel "as churchy as I wished to make it," and in January of 1977 her name appeared in the Times Literary Supplement as the heroine of a poll taken to...
[The entire page is 2401 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- Principal Works
-
Criticism
- John Updike (essay date 26 February 1979)
- Robert Phillips (review date 8 May 1981)
- Isa Kapp (essay date Spring 1983)
- Michiko Kakutani (review date 5 August 1983)
- Eleanor B. Wymard (essay date 13 January 1984)
- Robert Emmet Long (review date 24 November 1984)
- Diane Benet (essay date December 1984)
- Lynn Veach Sadler (essay date Spring 1985)
- Margaret Diane Stetz (essay date Spring 1985)
- Jill Rubenstein (essay date Winter 1986)
- Mason Cooley (essay date Spring 1986)
- Margaret C. Bradham (essay date Winter 1987)
- Merritt Moseley (essay date Winter 1990)
- Laura L. Doan (essay date 1991)
- Jean E. Kennard (essay date Spring 1993)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
