The Early Stories
by John Updike
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Somehow, it seems to me that John Updike is under-appreciated. Even though the man has won numerous awards, appeared in the New Yorker countless times, and published god-knows how many books, you just don't hear his name thrown around too much in discussions about our country's greatest writers. However, this book illustrates with startling clarity just how deserving he is of a place among the masters of the form. Any collection consisting of so many stories will have some duds, but standouts l...more
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"Pennypacker's office still smelled of linoleum, a clean, sad scent that seemed
to lift from the checkerboard floor in squares of alternating intensity; this pattern
had given Clyde as a boy a funny nervous feeling of intersection, and now he stood crisscrossed by a double sense of himself, his present identity extending down from Massachusetts to meet his disconsolate youth in Pennsylvania, projected upward from a distance of years."
Updike (from "The Persistence of Desire&q
to lift from the checkerboard floor in squares of alternating intensity; this pattern
had given Clyde as a boy a funny nervous feeling of intersection, and now he stood crisscrossed by a double sense of himself, his present identity extending down from Massachusetts to meet his disconsolate youth in Pennsylvania, projected upward from a distance of years."
Updike (from "The Persistence of Desire&q
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Read in January, 2004
Updike writes some really gorgeous sentences: "He felt his slender height, encased in his pin-striped English suit, unfold like an elegant and surprising weapon."
Although my taste usually runs to the more "experimental" (whatever that might mean), I have always loved Updike's insightfulness about the confusing chains of emotion that run through even the most everyday experience.
Although my taste usually runs to the more "experimental" (whatever that might mean), I have always loved Updike's insightfulness about the confusing chains of emotion that run through even the most everyday experience.
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Loved this book. It was like living John Updike's life with him for twenty years. Even though it's supposed to be fiction, so many of the stories are obviously autobiographical. I like his sense of humor and just his style. Some of these stories are really great, and they're all so short, it's a fun read.
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Read in September, 2007
Enjoying it so far, especially the earliest of the Early Stories, entitled "Ace in the Hole." Updike's tales aren't exactly full of geographic variety, most of them taking place in New England; however, he truly is the master of his domain.
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Read in June, 2007
I heard Alec Baldwin read "Wife-Wooing" from this ollection on NPR's "Selected Shorts" and was moved to pick it up. A huge colelction, adn I picked through it. I would love to devote more time to it, because his short stories are wonderful.
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Read in April, 2005
I know it's ridiculous but I really like this collection. Updike doesn't do much new with fiction but he's got an observant eye, and even when he's not being too showy with language, his prose can be gripping.
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recommends it for:
People who like short stories written in English.
I've been working my way through this for years now. It's never on top of my "current reading" stack, but whenever I turn to it I read something beautiful and keenly-observed.
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It's silly to have this on my "currently-reading" list. I'll probably be "currently-reading" it for the next 5 years, 1 or 2 stories at a time.
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Read in January, 2008
I've been known to find short stories unfulfilling, but these snippets of everyday life, bolstered by Updike's spot-on descriptions ring true.
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This is the collected version, which, I think, includes the really early Ollinger stories. They're great.
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Read in January, 2006
Well worth the read. It contains all of the "Olinger Stories," which has been long out-of-print.
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I just like having this book in the bookcase. (Sarah: Updike is shite.)
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Read in August, 2003
If I have to read about adultery ever again, I'm going to vom.
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Read in January, 2006
I love John Updike's stories. Great images, creative style.
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great great stories.
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