John Updike
I haven't read a single of Updike's famous Rabbit novels, and yet when I heard of his death yesterday, I felt I had lost a friend. He wrote tirelessly for the New Yorker - short stories, essays, long, erudite yet quirky and personal reviews of other writers. While his pieces filled that magazine and others, he was still writing novels - one a year, more or less. The New York Times article speaks of his "ebullient creativity" - a love of words and of writing, those "dark marks on paper," that carried him through life and carried us with him.
I had noticed that his work was darker, more concerned with mortality, but put it down to the natural thoughtfulness of an ageing writer. He didn't tell us that he was suffering from lung cancer and kept writing until he died.
An interview with John Updike will be replayed on Eleanor Wachtel's "Writers and Company" this coming Sunday afternoon at 3, on CBC-1. Don't miss it.
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