Rabbit Angstrom : The Four Novels : Rabbit, Run; Rabbit Redux; Rabbit is Rich; Rabbit at Rest (Everyman's Library)
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Rabbit Angstrom : The Four Novels : Rabbit, Run; Rabbit Redux; Rabbit is Rich; Rabbit at Rest (Everyman's Library)

4.3 of 5 stars 4.30  ·  rating details  ·  619 ratings  ·  107 reviews
When we first met him in Rabbit, Run (1960), the book that established John Updike as a major novelist, Harry (Rabbit) Angstrom is playing basketball with some boys in an alley in Pennsylvania during the tail end of the Eisenhower era, reliving for a moment his past as a star high school athlete. Athleticism of a different sort is on display throughout these four magnific...more
Hardcover, 1552 pages
Published December 21st 2010 by Everyman's Library (first published October 17th 1994)
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Liza Martin
Before embarking on the journey through Harry "Rabbit" Angstrom's life, I read a lot of the reviews on the first novel, "Rabbit, Run," and many readers expressed a strong dislike for the main character.

To all of those who disliked or even hated Harry: You don't know good literature when you read it!

Sure, Harry is no hero, but he's not an anti-hero, either. You don't like him throughout the series, but you can't hate him, either. He's just a normal man...more
Karen
Karen rated it 5 of 5 stars
Recommends it for: Everyone
An American classic that truly engulfs your every sense.

I just finished the series in the airport last week.

Updike writes phenomenal prose. His use of language is amazing.
"He encloses her skull in his hands, caressing the spinelike ridges behind the seashell curve of her ears, palming the broad curve of the whole, this cup, sealed upon a spirit."

So visceral.

So very descriptive of the times.

..."Some white man see a b...more
Brendan
Fifteen-hundred-and-sixteen pages later and I wish John Updike had written more. This is an amazing achievement of a story and I love every page of it.

Backstory:
In 2005 I was staying in Italy with a recovering professor of mine. I think when you are twenty-three and you're touring Italy with a girlfriend you should have a grand old party. But I ended up staying at Unsworth's house for a week solid. They even insisted that we return the rental car and they would arrange to...more
Steven
Steven rated it 5 of 5 stars
After a particularly unengaging two years of study I promised myself an extravagance – a big novel, for no reason. Something that I had been meaning to read for ten years or so, something american now. (Living in a colony, most of my novels have been british.) The last American novels were more than twenty years ago, Moby Dick and Lolita (American?). I picked the Rabbit Tetralogy.

Individually the books are enjoyable, immersionable even. But reading in a continuous uninterrupted sequ...more
Ajay R
Ajay R rated it 4 of 5 stars
Last week I was reading an article by John Updike and was struck (as usual) by the simplicity and lucidness of his prose. That got me thinking about his works that I have read and the result is this post on the Rabbit series of novels. The Rabbit tetralogy is a series of 4 novels written by John Updike, tracing the life of 'Harry Rabbit Angstrom', from his mid 20's to the next 4 decades. The novels were also written over a period of 4 decades with one novel being published in one decade startin...more
Jessie Young
I read books 1 and 2 in a different volume, but picked this one up because it was used and it ended up being $10 cheaper to buy this used volume than to just pick up the paperback versions of 3 and 4. Since finishing, I've switched to reading on my new Kindle. The juxtaposition of this 1500 page mammoth and the Kindle makes reading on a Kindle feel almost like cheating.

But perhaps the weight of this novel is a good thing. Makes you work for closure on Rabbit's life, rather than breezin...more
Melinda
Melinda rated it 5 of 5 stars
Recommends it for: people who like long books
Recommended to Melinda by: New York Times Book Magazine
I read these 4 novels one right after the other last year. It's challenging getting through all of them at once, but I did it. Since I did read all 4 books without stopping, I can't really choose which is my favorite or really even distinguish between them...to me it's all one big book. Rabbit is not that likable of a character, but what roped me in was the broad scope of American history lived by this one man over his life starting in the late 50's. It's not Forest Gump, but it is a way to unde...more
Conroywt
Rabbit Redux: In my mind, this was better than the first and third entries in the Rabbit Angstrom novels. Updike's creation of characters that seem to represent more than just an individual on the page is so easy for him. Jill a flower child, Skeeter a Vietnam War Vet, Mim an emigrant to the west to pursue a hedonistic life style and Rabbit--all rendered to make them individuals first, emblems of a disparate America second. Rabbit, untethered by but also indifferent to his wife's infidelitie...more
Alessia
Despite taking almost two months of my life to finish them, I really enjoyed these books. I feel I got to know Rabbit very well and as his life was enfolding through the decades, he became like an old friend, almost, despite not being at all a nice guy and a total chauvinist. But how real he and the other characters are. As others have already pointed out, none of the characters are very likable (including the insufferable son Nelson, what a waste of space) but you still want to keep reading an...more
Corey
Corey rated it 3 of 5 stars
*SPOILERS*
For all of its epic scope, I feel like I never really knew Rabbit Angstrom. I know he thought about sex a lot. He got in to drugs in the sixties, got high in his living room and screwed a teenage runaway. He left his wife in the fifties and she got drunk and drowned their newborn daughter. He got blamed, in absentia. He never was a good father, always resentful of his son's small hands ("those Springer hands," Springer being his wife's maiden name) and whiny nature. Eve...more
Bryan
Bryan rated it 5 of 5 stars
Ok the five star rating is overall for the four novels.
Rabbit, Run is about 300 pages and a great read. Sure not much happens if you break down a typical Updike novel, this is especially true with the Rabbit series, but that's not why anyone reads his books. The prose slowly paints a nice picture here.
Rabbit Redux - I hated, it was way too random, the strangest and worst book of the series. Unfortunately this needs to be read to understand the bridge to the third and fourth books...more
Geoff
Geoff rated it 4 of 5 stars
Shelves: favourites
I didn't know what to make of the first few chapters of Rabbit, Run. It took me a little while to get to grips with what I was reading, I think because it was so good. The tiniest details of Rabbit Angstrom's life as he runs a way from his responsibilies quickly became addictive reading. The characters in the book are incredible creations - fully human and whole. It's true that Rabbit is no hero - he's not particularly likeable or sympathetic and doesn't become so during the course of the book, ...more
Jan-Maat
I remember having ths as a trilogy - maybe I'm mistaken or maybe Updike sneakyily wrote an extra volume.

I recall the sequence in which Rabbit escapes his home town and drives south, and then eventually turns back. There were a couple of nice scenes which I found funny: dribbling the gold coins over his wifes sleeping and struggling with the sacks of silver coins. I recall Skeeter living at his house, diing and then Rabbit seeing Skeeter lives graffetti - I think in a subsequent volum...more
Boyce
Boyce rated it 5 of 5 stars
There are actually five Rabbit books. The fifth, a novella, Rabbit Remembered, is part of the volumn of stories, Licks of Love.
The Rabbit books are about Rabbit and about America, middle America from mid-century to the end of the 20th. Everything is it these books, every war, the movies, the styles, the politicians, economic up and down, racial issues, etc. The read the Rabbit books is to read an American chronicle. The sense of place - small town America - is as much a character as Rabbit...more
Andrew
Andrew rated it 2 of 5 stars
Good writing is not enough.
Stacie
Although it took me five months to complete, I've enjoyed every minute of it. Following the life of Rabbit Angstrom has become one of my favorite literary experiences. The themes of sex, ego, race, religion, family, and drugs influence the character through every part of this four-book series. Updike's writing is best displayed in these works; his descriptions of suburban life in Pennsylvania are easy to picture and relate to, especially as someone who grew up in the area as I did. Yet there are...more
Angela
Angela rated it 3 of 5 stars
Since this is, essentially, four separate novels, I took it upon myself to review them separately. Now that's dedication.

Overall: Updike knows how to set a scene. The first novel takes place in an era I wasn't around to experience, but I was there. I got it. These novels teach you something about America, what we think is important and how we cope. And it's depressing. Also: even if you hate the characters, and have a dislike of the story itself, you can't deny that Updike is a fanta...more
Taka
Rabbit, Run (read 10/2/09) - 3

This is a dense but concise story that's at best mediocre and cast in lavishly beautiful prose. As a writer, I cannot help but appreciate the beauty of Updike's descriptions. The story, though, isn't all that and it takes some hard slogging in the beginning to get through, but overall it's a fairly entertaining read.

Rabbit Redux (read 11/19/09) - 2.5

Rabbit Angstrom grows on you. The first hundred or two hundred pages are just meh, but o...more
Charles
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Scarlett
It took me about a year to get through all four novels, but I finally finished. I've stuck with Harry Angstrom through thick and thin (mostly thin).

Harry did a lot of really horrible things, and most of the time I hated his guts, but every so often, there were glimpses of someone who was trying to do the right thing but just didn't know how. To me, he was much more sympathetic in the first and last novels. I could understand why he did some of the things he did when he was young, an...more
Jesse
Jesse rated it 4 of 5 stars
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Susan Phelan
This is one of those books I felt I had to read in order to be educated in literature. I'm not an expert on that period of literature, but I can see why it is considered important. Written in first person, visual prose with a style that rambles as if it is coming straight from the rambles of our brain without a censer.

It was also dark and disturbing with characters I couldn't latch on to or hope for.

No plans to read the sequels.
Blanca
Blanca rated it 4 of 5 stars
Shelves: fiction
I highly suggest reading the collection, to make sure you read it in order and don't lose too much time between the separate novels. I read the history of young Rabbit through to his old age during the worst summer of my life. Reading about Rabbit's failures as a husband, father then business man and friend and lover really kept me in check. Perhaps because there are four novels Updike really has time to invest in all of the characters that play into the life of Rabbit Angstrom. Particularly...more
Kyle Kerns
Kyle Kerns rated it 1 of 5 stars
Shelves: 2009, own
Yet another "classic" that makes me question the people who make those decisions. What was happening the day all those people got together in that room and said, "this year's winner is RABBIT, this book about a stupid guy who continues to relive high school, the guy's stupid decisons, and the way he continues to make the same stupid decisions over and over again." To top it off, these people said TWICE that this c*^p was good!!!
Maryse Meijer
I can't figure it out. I sort of of hated reading these--and I read them all, straight through--but I can't quite get them out of my head, years later. The first novel is written beautifully, when Updike was a little younger, but the others are much more straightforward prose-wise and the plot and characters just become more and more ridiculous as the series goes on. But I don't know if they are really bad or if they just annoyed me.
Trish
Trish rated it 4 of 5 stars
Having read the first Rabbit book, I was ecstatic to find there were more, and just kept on reading. The first was definitely the best, but none was not worth the time to read. I also know for me that when I find a book I really like, I want to find out more about the characters, how they fare in the future etc. So, yes, I love sequals, even if they don't live up to the original.
Jim
Jim rated it 5 of 5 stars
Rabbit Run

The technical style of the book is hard to beat. There is a clear plot, minor characters that come to life, settings that are at once natural and resonant, and a deeper meaning to the story that comes out without long philosophical expositions. In short, this is as good as the realistic novel gets.

Reading the reviews on Goodreads, I am amazed at the number of people who see Updike as a misogynist. I suppose it must be because Rabbit treats women so badly and U...more
Bill Planey
Updike's best novels. You need to read them before you get cynical for maximum impact. Like much of Updike's longer writing, the emphasis on how everything poetically impacts all the senses makes you wish he had taken Strunk and White's "Elements of Style" very seriously.
Michelle
So, no one else in my book club particularly liked my selection, and I admit that most of the characters are not particularly likable. But Updike's writing style kept me going and the characters were just interesting to me. Everyone knows a Rabbit Angstrom - the popular high school jock who is slightly jerky but not a bad person who after high school ends up being joe schmo nobody. There are elements in all the characters, though, that we can relate to in how they address lives that haven't t...more
Ruthela
I thank Updike for giving me Harry angstrom. I fell in love with him and his ordinary rather pathetic life. The prose is exquisite and rich and poetic.

Updike created an incredibly real character with such complexity, human depth, and banal beauty. A genius of a novelist!
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Rabbit Angstrom (Everyman's Library Classics)
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John Hoyer Updike (born March 18, 1932 in Shillington, Pennsylvania) was an American writer. Updike's most famous work is his Rabbit series (Rabbit, Run; Rabbit Redux; Rabbit Is Rich; Rabbit At Rest; and Rabbit Remembered). Rabbit is Rich and Rabbit at Rest both won Pulitzer Prizes for Updike. Describing his subject as "the American small town, Protestant middle class," Updike is well kn...more
More about John Updike...
Rabbit, Run Rabbit Redux The Witches of Eastwick Rabbit Is Rich Rabbit At Rest

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