Updike's essays, and the Virginia Woolf test

i-302a7840eb9d9b25d5874d96d60e477d-DCB3D609-EDB0-453A-A1F5-31BF7D2AB98D.jpg

John Updike, 1955
Photo: Hulton Archive/Getty Images, via NYMag

The 'net is fairly bursting with Updike appreciations, but I especially like this one from Sam Anderson at New York, which notes that amid what can seem an intimidating body of work, Updike's essays offer an easy and richly satisfying introduction or revisit.

I always go back, first, to his essays, which strike me as the purest expression of his personality: easy, sociable, curious, smart, funny, generous, and almost pathologically cheerful. He was, for my money, one of the greatest belletrists of all time -- a master of the short, casual, elegant, whimsical, roving piece about absolutely anything. ...He could take the fruits of high culture -- obscure philosophy, art history, sociological scraps -- and translate it, for a wide audience, into little miracles of focused thought, all written in an elegant verbal music.

It was wonderful, for instance, to see Updike, beginning in his late fifties, set out to make himself a deeply informed writer on art, which he did; most of that work ended up in the New York Review of Books.

And

He had the prose equivalent of a perfect baseball swing: effortless, smooth, and with a very high rate of success.

See too this admiration from the NEH site:

Of all modern American writers, Updike comes closest to meeting Virginia Woolf's demand that a writer's only job is to get himself, or herself, expressed without impediments.

More like this

John Updike died today. He was one of my favorite writers, although I didn't fall in love with his work until I lived for a few years outside of America. It was then that I first read the complete Rabbit series, from "Rabbit, Run" to "Rabbit Remembered" and became rather obsessed with his short…
Oliver Sacks, writing on mania and manic depressive disorder in the New York Review of Books: One may call it mania, madness, or psychosis--a chemical imbalance in the brain--but it presents itself as energy of a primordial sort. Greenberg likens it to "being in the presence of a rare force of…
Preface | Pt. 1 | Pt. 2 | Pt. 3 | (Sidebar 1) | Pt. 4 | Pt. 5 | Pt. 6 Pt. 7 | (Sidebar 2a) | (Sidebar 2b) | Pt. 8 | Pt. 9 | Conclusion This post was written by new guest blogger Jason Delborne.* George Cruikshank (1836), A London Audience, from Hulton Archive/Getty Images The notion of the "…
About two weeks ago I went to Politics and Prose for a great talk by the New Yorker's Adam Gopnik, who was in DC promoting his new book, Angels and Ages, a book of essays about Charles Darwin and Abraham Lincoln. The words and actions of these two influential men - some would call them secular…