Dec 27, 2009
By the time he reached the age of seventy in 2002, John Updike had built a secure reputation as novelist, poet, and critic, rivaled perhaps only by his close contemporary Philip Roth as a chronicler of American society and politics in the second half of the twentieth century. As Updike suggests in his foreword toThe Early Stories: 1953-1975, however, his career—if not his reputation—was built upon the short stories, many of them very short indeed, published here together for the first time. Like two other famous Johns before him—O’Hara in the 1930’s and Cheever in the...
[The entire page is 1991 words long]
©2000-2009
Enotes.com Inc.
All Rights Reserved