John Updike

John Updike
John Hoyer Updikewas an American novelist, poet, short story writer, art critic, and literary critic...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionNovelist
Date of Birth18 March 1932
CountryUnited States of America
exile extremes grandeur host human likes plays york
My complaint, as an exile who once loved New York and who likes to return a half-dozen times a year, is not that it plays host to extremes of the human condition: There is grandeur in that, and necessity.
exile york
New York is, of course, many cities, and an exile does not return to the one he left.
general habitable maintained private public spaces virtually york
New York is a city with virtually no habitable public space - only private spaces expensively maintained within the general disaster.
bottle feed full hemingway literary trying york
Hemingway described literary New York as a bottle full of tapeworms trying to feed on each other
new-york trying bottles
Hemingway describes literary New York as a bottle full of tapeworms trying to feed on each other.
new-york cities return
New York is of course many cities, and an exile does not return to the one he left.
new-york book writing
When I write, I aim in my mind not toward New York but to a vague spot a little to the east of Kansas. I think of the books on library shelves, without their jackets, years old, and a countryish teen-aged boy finding them, and having them speak to him. The review, the stacks in Brentano's, are just hurdles to get over, to place the books on that shelf.
new-york book cutting
Our brains are no longer conditioned for reverence and awe. We cannot imagine a Second Coming that would not be cut down to size by the televised evening news, or a Last Judgment not subject to pages of holier-than-thou second-guessing in The New York Review of Books.
easter new-york writing
When I write, I aim in my mind not toward New York but toward a vague spot a little to the east of Kansas.
new-york boston cities
An American in London...cannot but be impressed and charmed by the city. The momumentality of Washington, the thriving business of New York, the antique intimacy of Boston, plus a certain spacious and open feeling reminiscent of Denver and San Francisco-all these he finds combined for his pleasure.
new-york believe people
The true New Yorker secretly believes that people living anywhere else have to be, in some sense, kidding.
agents literary seemed york
In leaving New York in 1957, I did leave without regret the literary demimonde of agents and would-be's and with-it nonparticipants; this world seemed unnutritious and interfering.
criticism failure threatens
The study of literature threatens to become a kind of paleontology of failure, and criticism a supercilious psychoanalysis of authors.
appeal primitive secretly television
I secretly understood: the primitive appeal of the hearth. Television is-its irresistible charm-a fire.