From the Bookshelf of 101 Books to Read Before You Die

Rabbit, Run
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Start date
February 1, 2019
Finish date
February 28, 2019
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+ Completed Reads
March read - Ham on Rye
By Mike · 9 posts · 13 views
last updated May 10, 2020 04:29PM
April Read - What A Carve Up
By Mike · 2 posts · 4 views
last updated Apr 19, 2020 06:52AM
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Other topics mentioning this book
This topic has been closed to new comments. September Nomination- Adult Read
By Jennifer · 26 posts · 34 views
last updated Aug 21, 2013 01:34PM
This topic has been closed to new comments. October 101 book
By Alana · 5 posts · 17 views
last updated Sep 23, 2016 04:17PM
Ideas, Challenges, Themes, Suggestions
By Alana · 28 posts · 31 views
last updated Aug 04, 2018 12:21PM
Ideas for future discussion
By Alana · 34 posts · 34 views
last updated Dec 07, 2018 04:57PM

What Members Thought

Alana
Oct 21, 2016 rated it it was ok
A young man runs out on his family, then on everyone else he encounters, blaming everyone else when he doesn't know what to do with his life, and all in all being an a**. Yes, the structure of the book gives the impression of running, and it gets very tedious, I suppose trying to make the reader feel hemmed in the way the character does, but other than that, just a lot of needless, gratuitous sex, a horrible, apparently non-redeemable main character, and a lousy ending. No thanks. ...more
Danny Aldham

I finished reading John Updike’s ‘Rabbit, Run’. I disliked it more every page.
‘Dumb’, thinks Harry Angstrom, Rabbit, of his wife Janice. But Harry is dumb. As are all of the characters. They are inarticulate uneducated lumps. Is this how Updike sees Americans, or are they really like this? Everything Harry does is driven by his penis. It is a sad, sordid tale. I am not sure I see a drop of empathy by any of the characters for others. Every single person is one-hundred-percent self centered. And
...more
Mary
My first encounter with John Updike. I’m on a quest to read all the Pulitzers and know that books 3 and 4 in this series are Pulitzer Prize winners. It makes sense to start my reading with Book#1 in the series.

This is a phenomenal book. From the very first paragraph I knew this would be a great read.

The writing style reminded me of Philip Roth - if you’ve enjoyed his books then this one is for you.

Have looked at some other 5* reviews and don’t believe I have much to add, simply “read it”. This
...more
Lisa Degraaf
Nov 30, 2012 marked it as to-read
Shelves: 1001-all-lists
David Black
Mar 19, 2013 rated it really liked it
Teela Stoll
May 17, 2014 marked it as to-read
Lolita
Oct 02, 2014 marked it as to-read
Jaclyn
Apr 26, 2015 rated it liked it
Shelves: own-in-print
T.K
Jul 11, 2015 marked it as to-read
Kate
Jul 08, 2016 marked it as to-read
Rebecca
Nov 08, 2016 rated it did not like it  ·  review of another edition
Jaime
Jul 24, 2017 marked it as to-read
Mehdi Sheikh
Aug 16, 2017 marked it as to-read  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: books-i-own
Duru
Jan 31, 2020 marked it as to-read  ·  review of another edition
Monica
Aug 16, 2020 marked it as to-read
Indiwyn
Apr 05, 2022 marked it as to-read