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About The Book
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Big on style slight on substance: that has been a common charge over the years by critics of John Updike. In fact however John Updike is one of the most serious writers of modern times. Myth as this book shows unlocks his fictional universe and repeatedly breaks open the powerful themes in his literary parables of the gospel. Myth and Gospel in the Fiction of John Updike also includes a personal tribute to John Updike by his son David two essays by pioneer Updike scholars Alice and Kenneth Hamilton and an anecdotal chapter in which readers share Updike discoveries and recommendations. All in all weight is added to the complaint that the master of myth and gospel was shortchanged by the Nobel committee. John Updike had better eyes than ours. He memorably noticed everyday details that without him wed miss. McTavish returns the favor uncovering surprising mythic riches beneath Updikes deceptively mundane surfaces. Deploying wit theological insight (Elizanne echoes eleison) lively links with Ayckbourn Hawthorne and more generous inclusion of others views gossipy encounters with Updikes family and the iconic writer himself in blessedly jargon-free prose McTavishs close reading of Updike is an eye-opener all the way. --Bruce McLeod Retired parish minister and former Moderator of The United Church of Canada John Updike was an American treasure. In the second half of the twentieth century Updike and Saul Bellow inherited the mantle of literary giant that William Faulkner and Ernest Hemingway wore in the first half. A master of the elegantly lyrical sentence and the precisely observed detail Updike used these gifts to probe the yearnings both spiritual and mundane of ordinary Americans. John McTavish is an ideal reader of Updikes explorations of the complex relationship between the sacred and the profane. --Don Greiner Curator of Modern American Literature University of South Carolina; author The Other John Updike: Poems Short Stories Prose Play John McTavishs book is a result of the long time reading of Updikes works from a specific perspective--their relation to myth and Christianity. The structure of the book is mosaic-like as it also contains works of some other authors on Updike which makes the discussion dynamic. I recommend this book warmly to all readers interested in Updike because it will help them understand the profound religious and philosophical dilemmas that permeate his oeuvre. --Biljana Dojčinovic Faculty of Philology University of Belgrade This book bears witness to a half-century of engagement with a writer called one of the few literary links with the historic Christian faith. In addition to his own insightful commentary on the mythic and theological dimensions of Updikes work McTavish garners ephemeral reviews pays homage to the pioneering scholarship of Alice and Kenneth Hamilton indexes stories where the mix of myth and gospel is particularly thick and offers a provocative collection of reminiscences by a range of Updikes readers. A testimony to Updikes continuing significance--and to the vitality of his reputation both within and outside the academy. --Kathleen Verduin Professor of English Hope College I will read my father more closely now that John McTavish has shone a light on the delicate and deep tensions present as Updikes characters grapple with the complexities of being fully human. Do our physical urges diminish our spiritual yearnings or do they uphold each other? Mr. McTavish reveals the soul of Updikes work and the spirit of a twentieth-century American writer engaged with conflicting and life-affirming truths. --Elizabeth Cobblah John McTavish is a minister of the United Church of Canada a playwright and compiler of chancel dramas co-editor of the book Karl Barth: Preaching through the Christian Year (Eerdmans) and a longtime student of John Updikes work with interpretative articles in academic jour