Read Updike Online

Authors: Adam Begley

Updike (68 page)

BOOK: Updike
5.15Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

71 “Stravinsky looks upon the mountain”:
CP
, 257.

71 “the mythogenetic truth”: Ibid., xxiv.

71 “the flight of a marvelous crow”: Ibid., 3.

72 “the smell of wet old magazines”:
CJU
, 23.

72 He also remembered the lonely bliss:
MM
, 795.

72 “about the Peruvian”: CC to JU, April 22, 1954, Harper.

72 Updike replied with a long letter: JU to CC, April 26, 1954, Harper.

73 Canfield made vague, encouraging noises: CC to JU, May 10, 1954, Harper.

73 Updike eventually promised: JU to CC, March 17, 1955, Harper.

73 As she wrote in the letter: KSW to JU, July 17, 1954, NYPL.

73 He didn’t want to give any more interviews: JU to Eric Rayman, June 30, 2008. The letter is in Rayman’s possession.

75 “John was always a striver”: Author interview, MA, April 1, 2009.

75 “one of the most exclusive”: LGH to JU, February 15, 1951, Ursinus.

76 he claimed to have “peaked” as a scholar:
OJ
, 841.

76 “As I settled into the first lecture”:
SC
, 254.

76 “delivered with a slightly tremulous elegance”:
OJ
, 840.

76 “That a literary work could have a double life”: Ibid., 843.

77 “staid, tweedy” poet:
MM
, 764.

77 “the least tweedy of writing instructors”: Ibid.

77 “the very model of a cigarette-addicted Gallic intellectual”:
ES
, ix.

78 “None of his courses”: Lasch, October 9, 1951, Rochester.

78 “Updike keeps plowing ahead”: Lasch, October 14, 1951, Rochester.

78 “a kind of younger
Couples
”:
T
d.

78 “eighty-five percent bent upon becoming a writer”:
MM
, 789.

78 “the trouble was”: Edward Hoagland, “A Novelist’s Novelist,”
The New York Times
, October 17, 1982.

79 “art was a job you did on your own”:
DC
, 627.

79 “losing sight of his initial purpose”: Lasch, February 2, 1952, Rochester.

79 when Kit finally met the “lady love”: Lasch, February 24, 1952, Rochester.

79 “She sounds alright to me”; LGH to JU, February 2, 1952, Ursinus.

80 “I am no longer amused by her flutterings”: LGH to JU, December 1, 1950, Ursinus.

80 “an air of slight unrest”: Lasch, April 8, 1952, Rochester.

80 unpublished version of “Homage to Paul Klee”: Houghton.

81 “I courted her essentially by falling down”: “View from the Catacombs,” 73.

82 “We need a writer”: LP, November 3, 1951, Houghton.

82 “I feel I am on the lip”: LP, March 10, 1953, Houghton.

84 One of his Lampoon colleagues: E-mail, John Hubbard to author, September 28, 2009.

84 “If only he would write”: Lasch, September 22, 1952, Rochester.

84 “The financial aspect”: Lasch, February 22, 1953, Rochester.

85 “Updike was elected”: Lasch, April 12, 1953, Rochester.

87 He arrived in Cambridge a “cultural bumpkin”:
SC
, 110.

87 “first and . . . most vivid glimpse”:
HS
, 196.

87 “a yen to read great literature”: LP, May 28, 1951, Houghton.

87 “worshipped, and gossiped about, Eliot and Pound”:
OJ
, 840.

87 “like an encompassing gray cloud”:
PP
, 256.

87 “The only thing that has sustained me”: JU to Joan George Zug, quoted in
T
d.

88 literature “was revered as it would not be again”:
MM
, 27.

88 “‘You know,’ he told his old friend”:
DC
, 538.

89 “Joe McCarthy (against)”:
OJ
, 840.

89 “Not one class I took”: Ibid., 839.

89 The sun burned his nose: LP, June 30, 1953, Houghton.

90 “About the job—”: WM to JU, March 18, 1954, Houghton,

91 “I managed a froggy backstroke”:
DC
, 83.

91 “a babbling display of ignorance”:
OJ
, 841.

91 Asked by a classmate: E-mail, Benjamin La Farge to author, January 30, 2010.

91 When Updike saw it: LP, February 16, 1953, Houghton.

92 “If I were reasonable”: LP, May 17, 1955, Houghton.

92 “That long face with the nose accentuated”: E-mail, Peter Judd to author, March 24, 2010.

92 “He never liked intellectuals”:
T
d.

92 “I was kind of a loner”: Ibid.

93 John suggested they stay: Lasch, November 22, 1953, Rochester.

94 “sounds a programmatic note”: Ward W. Briggs Jr., “One Writer’s Classics: John Updike’s Harvard,”
Amphora
(Fall 2002): 14.

97 “to give the mundane its beautiful due”:
ES
, xv.

97 the magazine was “delighted”: WM to JU, August 5, 1954, NYPL.

97 “I felt, standing and reading”:
MM
, 763.

97 “the ecstatic breakthrough of my literary life”:
CJU
, 25.

98 “The point, to me, is plain”:
OS
, vii.

99 “Cheever’s story involved drunkenness”:
MM
, 764.

99 “one of my greatest enemies”; LP, January 31, 1954, Houghton.

99 “owes something” to the dead Easter chick:
ES
, x.

99 In a letter to his editor: JU to WM, October 4, 1954, NYPL.

99 “everything outside Olinger”:
OS
, vii.

100 “I had given myself five years”: Ibid.

101 “ . . . Perhaps / we meet our heaven”:
EP
, 27.

101 “Four years was enough Harvard”:
OJ
, 841.

102 “Just a note to tell you”: Quoted in Ben Yagoda,
About Town: The
New Yorker
and the World It Made
(New York: Scribner, 2000), 18. (Hereafter cited as Yagoda,
About Town
.)

102 “The first time I took him to lunch”: Hiller.

102 “passive-aggressive aw-shucks pose”: Letter, MA to author, May 8, 2010.

102 “the object,” as Updike put it:
MM
, 780.

III. The Talk of the Town

105 “Nothing like a sneering nude”: JU to KL, November 10, 1954, Rochester.

105 “the sooty, leonine sprawl of the Ashmolean”:
ES
, 193.

106 “I’ve never done anything harder”:
CJU
, 105.

106 “Mary, in need of a bathroom”: JU to WM, February 2, 1962, Illinois.

107 “The color of March”:
CP
, 7.

107 “I think John really disapproved”: Author interview, MW, April 7, 2011.

107 Updike confessed in
Self-Consciousness
:
SC
, 132.

108 “The English climate”: JU to KL, September 23, 1954, Rochester.

108 “Englishmen are astoundingly ignorant”: JU to KL, November 10, 1954, Rochester.

109 “He typed automatically”: Author interview, MW, April 7, 2011.

109 A letter from Katharine White: KSW to JU, September 15, 1954, NYPL.

110 “We price every manuscript separately”: Ibid.

110 “In many ways,” he bravely claimed: JU to KSW, November 26, 1954, NYPL.

111 “More than any other editor”: William Shawn, “Katharine Sergeant White,”
The New Yorker
, August 1, 1977, 72.

111 “aristocratic sureness of taste”:
OJ
, 771–75.

112 “A colon is compact, firm, and balanced”: JU to KSW, November 26, 1954, NYPL.

112 “try to feel more kindly toward the dash”: KSW to JU, December 1, 1954, NYPL.

112 in March, she suggested: KSW to JU, March 21, 1955, NYPL.

113 White suggested that he should avoid: KSW to JU, February 14, 1955, NYPL.

114 “the domestic scene”: KSW to JU, March 23, 1957, NYPL.

114 “an entirely different locale”: KSW to JU, February 14, 1955, NYPL.

114 “We think it is the best written prose”: KSW to JU, April 5, 1955, NYPL.

114 Updike read his first Nabokov:
PP
, 220.

115 “[T]hey play flitting, cooing chorus”:
HS
, 326.

115 “He is a saint of the mundane”: Ibid., 312.

115 the “intensity of witnessing”: Ibid., 311.

115 Green’s “limpid realism”: Ibid., 328.

115 Green’s “formal ambitiousness”: Ibid.

116 “Both quite bowled me over”:
DC
, 660.

116 “full of a tender excitement”:
PP
, 21.

116 Updike “rose to no bait”: E-mail, Judd to author, March 24, 2010.

118 Updike remembered driving:
DC
, 102.

118 “[He] would make
this
trip alone”: LGH,
Enchantment
, 114.

118 “meet the man who was going to be”: Ibid., 112.

118 “seemed saddened, as if she had laid an egg”:
SC
, 48.

119 “It was all pretty monastic”: Author interview, TB, September 13, 2009.

119 “He struck
The New Yorke
r
”:
WMRR
.

120 “John was the star”: Author interview, TB, September 13, 2009.

120 “If ever a writer, a magazine”: Yagoda,
About Town
, 302.

120 Updike praised Yagoda’s book:
DC
, 102.

120 “ever since you accepted”: JU to WM, May 19, 1995, Illinois.

120 “It is a slightly different”: WM to JU, May 7, 1958, NYPL.

120 “continuously insolent and alive”: Quoted in Yagoda,
About Town
, 214.

121 “the bull’s-eye of our city”:
PP
, 78.

121 “The city,” E. B. White rhapsodized: E. B. White,
Here Is New York
(New York: The Little Bookroom, 1999), 29.

121 “pampered and urban”:
OJ
, 135.

122 “the delicious immensity of the excluded”:
PP
, 94.

122 “at least all of the following”: Quoted in Mary F. Corey,
The World Through a Monocle:
The New Yorker
at Midcentury
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1999), 10.

122 “I loved that magazine so much”:
PP
, 52–53.

125 “two hours of fanciful typing”:
HS
, 847.

125 “It was perfectly obvious”: Quoted in Yagoda,
About Town
, 306.

125 “a kind of contemptuous harried virtuosity”:
HS
, 849.

126 Updike once defined “
New Yorker
-ese”: JU interviewed by David Remnick,
New Yorker
Festival, 2005.

126 “It seemed unlikely that I would ever get better”:
HS
, 849.

126 “innocent longing for sophistication”:
PP
, 421.

128 “I began to read Proust”: Ibid., 165.

130 On his second visit, he was invited to dinner: KL to Paula Budlong, October 19, 1955, Rochester.

130 “They invite you to dinner”: KL to Paula Budlong, October 23, 1955, Rochester.

133 anxious theological investigations:
OJ
, 844.

135 “there was this really intense nonspeaking atmosphere”: Author interview, TB, September 13, 2009.

135 Updike’s fondness for gags: JU to TB, May 25, 1989, Houghton.

136 “He was participating in the life of the city”: Author interview, MW, April 7, 2011.

137 “substantially” his own: JU to WM, April 16, 1957, NYPL.

138 “not only the best general magazine in America”:
DC
, 100–101.

139 “from the real (the given, the substantial) world”:
CP
, xxiii.

141 “sole ambition”:
CJU
, 12.

141 “If there is anything to be”: WM to JU, August 3, 1955, NYPL.

141 “the only gregarious man on the premises”:
MM
, 785.

141 “everything,” Updike remembered: Remnick interview, 2005.

142 Napoleon and St. Francis of Assisi: William Maxwell, “The Art of Fiction No. 71,”
The Paris Review
85 (Fall 1982). (Hereafter cited as Maxwell, “The Art of Fiction No. 71.”)

142 “pinkly crouched behind his proof-piled desk”:
MM
, 780.

142 “unfailing courtesy and rather determined conversational blandness”: Ibid., 779.

142 “without moving a muscle”: Ibid., 780.

142 “His sense of honor”:
DC
, 103.

143 his “gratitude and admiration”: William Shawn to JU, October 18, 1960, NYPL.

143 an “ineffable eminence”:
DC
, 102.

143 “the message was commonly expressed”:
MM
, 783.

144 “He was, in effect, the caretaker of my livelihood”: Ibid., 783.

144 he “conveyed a murmurous, restrained nervous energy”: Ibid., 780.

145 “If he doesn’t get the Nobel Prize”: WM, “Confidential Report on Candidate,” 1959 Guggenheim Fellowship competition, received by the Guggenheim Foundation on December 18, 1958.

145 Maxwell said, “That’s a short story”:
MM
, 781.

145 Maxwell thought the finished product: JU to WM, January 21, 1958, NYPL.

145 “The relationship,” as Updike acknowledged:
MM
, 783.

145 “meddlesome perfectionism” of
New Yorker
editors:
OJ
, 116.

145 “a good verbal tussle”: JU to WM, January 12, 1961, NYPL.

145 “part of a machine”:
MM
, 783.

146 “Could there have been an easier”: WM to JU, undated [1975?], NYPL.

146 Updike waxed ecstatic: JU to WM, January 23, 1992, Illinois.

147 Updike wrote to Bailey: JU to TB, April 15, 2005, Anthony Bailey Papers, Houghton Library, Harvard University.

147 “a large, semi-ruinous mock-Tudor mansion”: Brendan Gill,
Here at the New Yorker
(New York: Da Capo, 1997), 226.

148 He felt “crowded, physically and spiritually”:
MM
, 806.

148 the city’s “ghastly plentitude”:
OJ
, 56.

148 “whatever you might do or achieve in New York”: Letter, MA to author, November 29, 2010.

148 “Not quite right for me, as the rejection slips say”: LP, May 21, 1956, Houghton.

BOOK: Updike
5.15Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Her Secret Wish by J.M. Madden
Bachelor Unleashed by Brenda Jackson
Knight of Pleasure by Margaret Mallory
Magical Mayhem by Amity Maree
Rachel's Folly by Bruno, Monica
Hide and seek by Paul Preuss
Falling in Love Again by Sophie King
Trust Me II by Jones, D. T.
The Empire of Ice Cream by Jeffrey Ford