Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Vargas Llosa, Mario (Vol. 85) - John Updike (review date 24 August 1987)
Vargas Llosa, Mario (Vol. 85) - John Updike (review date 24 August 1987)
John Updike (review date 24 August 1987)
SOURCE: "Resisting the Big Guys," in The New Yorker, Vol. LXIII, No. 27, August 24, 1987, pp. 83-6.
[Considered an extraordinary stylist and a perceptive observer of the human condition, Updike is one of America's most distinguished men of letters. Best known for such novels as Rabbit Run (1960), Rabbit Redux (1971), Rabbit Is Rich (1981), and Rabbit at Rest (1990), he is a chronicler of life in Protestant, middle-class America. In the following excerpt, he finds that Who Killed Palomino Molero? is a compelling portrait of racism in Latin America and of virtue amid pervasive corruption.]
The Peruvian man of letters Mario Vargas Llosa is almost too good to be true; cosmopolitan, handsome, and versatile, he puts a pleasant and reasonable face on the Latin-American revolution in the novel, and, in such gracious public performances as his panel appearances in New York...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Mario Vargas Llosa (essay date 1967)
- Michael Wood (review date 27 March 1986)
- Raymond Leslie Williams (essay date 1986)
- Charles Rossman (essay date Winter 1987)
- Mary E. Davis (essay date Winter 1987)
- Jorge Guzman (review date January-June 1987)
- John Updike (review date 24 August 1987)
- Charles Rossman (essay date 1987)
- Ursula K. Le Guin (review date 29 October 1989)
- Mario Vargas Llosa with Ricardo A. Setti (interview date Fall 1990)
- John Updike (review date 1 October 1990)
- Mario Vargas Llosa (essay date 15 October 1990)
- Sara Castro-Klarén (essay date 1990)
- Peter Standish (essay date Spring 1991)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
