book data
812 ratings, 4.01 average rating, 40 reviews
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published
August 27th 1996
by Ballantine Books
binding
Paperback, 480 pages
setting
Unknown
literary awards
Pulitzer Prize for Fiction (1991); National Book Critics Circle Award (1990)
isbn
0449911942
(isbn13: 9780449911945)
description
It's 1989, and Harry "Rabbit" Angstrom feels anything but restful. In fact he's frozen, incapacitated by his fear of death--and in the fina...more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 1201)
we believe that with time comes wisdom, that by the time we’re older we’ll have acquired a natural sense of life and other people and our own self and how to live this life -- how to cast aside the pettiness and do away with the small things that mean nothing more than cancerous nibblings at our gut. but no. it doesn’t just happen. we don’t leave that stuff behind unless we make a serious effort to do so. and it’s hard work. we don’t wanna turn into one of those morons that’s alway...more
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bookshelves:
florida,
pulitzer,
suburban-angst,
updike
Read in June, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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When I say that this is the best of John Updike's "Rabbit" series of 4 books, I have only finished this book & the first book "Rabbit Run". I started reading Rabbit Redux, & was completely turned off by the characters. The same thing happened in Rabbit is Rich. How could a writer as good as Updike write about such trashy people living such trashy lives? Perhaps it was the times, the "Anything goes 60's & '70's & the "ME generation 1980's." ...more
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Read in January, 2008
Updike's Rabbit series ends - suprisingly - softly. Despite a tumultuous 60 years full of controversial life decisions by the main character Rabbit, Updike decides, perhaps NOT suprisingly (since Updike himself was in his own later years when writing this book), that things should wind down gracefully. Updike did an amazing job in this series making plot and theme connections between books, and here in his waning days, Rabbit's character comes full-circle, with echoes of Book 1, Rabbit Run, an...more
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Read in January, 2007
Perhaps not as compelling as the first and third novels, if only because you feel at this point that you know Harry, and can anticipate his actions and reactions, think his thoughts before he expresses them. That's a tribute to Updike's development of the character, but don't assume too much - Rabbit Angstrom is still quite unpredictable, and there are still many surprises along the way.
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Ok, I’m done with the series. I’ve seen this a few other times as well, but it never fails to “shock and awe” me when a writer takes an ordinary life and turns it into good literature. In this case, it’s more than just good literature. This series is pretty darn outstanding and incomparable to anything else that I’ve read on “American life.” I have to say that my most favorite was Rabbit Redux, which was the most bizarre one.
Given how many people there are who think t...more
Given how many people there are who think t...more
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so i slogged my way all the way through the rabbit series. my honest opinion about this masterwork of literature??? it drug on a little. updike no doubt was keenly able to capture the penultimate masculine life, but i actually have a little more faith in the man of mankind. i don't think most of us are nearly as reprehensible as rabbit. in any event, i really dug updike's writing style throughout the novels. i found it really difficult to make it through the middle volumes...but i have to say......more
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bookshelves:
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#18 on the Entertainment Weekly 100 New Classics
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Read in April, 2008
recommends it for:
someone not in a rush...
a good book by an author with a fairly unique voice.
i have only read this, the last of four books in the rabbit series by updike. he captures what would be an uneventful and otherwise normal life of the aging everyman in america from an insiders point of view.
not necessarily a happy read or uplifting, but read slowly it delivers some lessons worth exploring.
updike describes his characters and their thoughts with language usually reserved for lush landscapes. ...more
i have only read this, the last of four books in the rabbit series by updike. he captures what would be an uneventful and otherwise normal life of the aging everyman in america from an insiders point of view.
not necessarily a happy read or uplifting, but read slowly it delivers some lessons worth exploring.
updike describes his characters and their thoughts with language usually reserved for lush landscapes. ...more
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recommends it for:
mature readers
Another mostly negative book in the series, although here Rabbit and Updike seem to make some peace with the inevitable emptiness of life and relationships. There's a lot here about the inherent distance between people, even people in supposedly the most intimate relationships. Despite that distance, though, the book also bittersweetly presents some surprising and fleeting moments of human connection. By the end, you even feel as though some of those fleeting moments may have amounted to some...more
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Read in August, 2008
recommended to Stephanie by:
Book Club
I finished Rabbit at Rest in about two days. It was an extremely quick read. It reminded me of some of the chick lit books I have read - except it's geared toward men. Because I haven't read an Updike book in years, I was surprised by how light and frivolous parts of the book were. I recommend this book, but the reader should be prepared for something along the lines of a beach read.
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bookshelves:
1980s,
fiction,
fiction-20th-century,
fiction-american,
own,
pulitzer-winners,
series
Read in June, 2007
recommends it for:
people who have read the others, of course
I WANT RABBIT AFTERLIFE BOOKS DAMMIT
Reading Updike always makes me want to write novels. The way his description can make even the most trivial things seem fascinating makes me walk around with an overly detailed interior monologue for a few days. After going through four long books with him, I'm really going to miss Rabbit, even though he was a bastard.
Reading Updike always makes me want to write novels. The way his description can make even the most trivial things seem fascinating makes me walk around with an overly detailed interior monologue for a few days. After going through four long books with him, I'm really going to miss Rabbit, even though he was a bastard.
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bookshelves:
u-s--literature
Read in November, 2007
I decided to read all of the Rabbit books after hearing a podcast in which Richard Ford's trilogy was compared to Updike's series. While I would say that I prefer Ford, I must admit that I liked them. Given my rather negative impression of most of Updike's essays, I was pleasantly surprised.
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Read in January, 1997
A series that, for me, did not reflect the times or the author's growth the way others seem to think. YMMV. I'll take the Last Picture Show, Texasville, Duane's Depressed, trilogy over this one. Rabbit should have stopped a book or two ago.
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As a collective whole, the Rabbit novels (Rabbit, Run; Rabbit Redux; Rabbit is Rich; and Rabbit at Rest) are the most brilliant books I have ever read. Any attempt to explain why would be inadequate; just read them.
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Read in July, 2007
Chilling, brilliant ending to the Rabbit series. Updike's ability to humanize this character is heroic. You look back on Rabbit's life and see little. But if the last scene doesn't deeply affect you you need to get your pulse checked.
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Read in October, 2008
When I took this book out of the library I didn't realize that it was the last book in a series. I really enjoyed it so I guess I'll be reading the three previous novels.
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Read in December, 2007
recommends it for:
all people
John Updike's Rabbit series is so well-written it blows my mind. Start with Rabbit, Run and read them all. Now. But, don't expect them to put you in a good mood or anything.
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Liked it a lot. What page is that blurb on Frank Sinatra, on? I love it when he listens to the old-time radio Gogie Grant etc... This was good !
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Don't really want to read it... based on the trend of the first three I have a feeling it's going to be the most depressing of all.
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