For Rabbit, with Love and Squalor: An American Read by Anne Roiphe

For Rabbit, with Love and Squalor: An American Read

Anne Roiphe
240 pages
Free Press
Nov 2000
Hardcover
All Fiction WSBN
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From Publishers Weekly Roiphe, a New York memoirist and novelist with a special interest in women's experiences (1185 Park Avenue; Fruitful: Living Contradictions: A Memoir of Modern Motherhood, etc.) has hit upon a clever organizing principle for these seven essays: recollections of literary love affairs with famous male protagonists from recent American literature. Roiphe writes of how these seemingly real characters have permanently affected her understanding of men, relationships and love, from her adolescence to her middle age. As she makes her way through her favorite novels, offering insights from the literary to the confessional, we see how her reading experiences parallel her personal life. In a particularly emotional chapter on John Updike's Rabbit, Roiphe, against her better judgment, confesses her love for such a flawed, immature, yet winning man: "I understand perfectly well that Rabbit is a stand-in for America's failure of moral courage... I know that he and his friends are vulgar, uneducated bigoted provincials... Still. Who could resist loving Rabbit? Not me." Roiphe makes a significant contribution to the growing field of "subjective literary criticism." She also opens up a subject that has been underexamined: the sexual/relationship fantasies of heterosexual women about male characters (traditionally, scholarly focus has been on male obsession with imagined females). The author also touches on how her Jewish identity factors into her fantasies about (and anticipated rejection by) certain male characters, such as Philip Roth's Nathan Zuckerman. Roiphe writes that "the book was enormous fun to write"; any woman reader who has ever fallen in love with a fictional male (that is, just about every female reader of fiction) will find it enormous fun to read. Author tour. (Nov.) Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. From
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Recommended for serious lit lovers. Roiphe is a 'reader's reader'

I've been a fan of Anne Roiphe's writing since college (which was a looooong time ago), beginning with her then-bestseller Up the Sandbox More recently I've been reading her various memoirs: 1185 Park Avenue: A Memoir, Art and Madness: A Memoir of Lust Without Reason, and Epilogue: A Memoir - all of them excellent. This book, FOR RABBIT, WITH LOVE AND SQUALOR, is a different sort of book altogether, and I enjoyed it immensely. It is a very personalized sort of literary criticism, I suppose, as Roiphe writes of her special and long relationships with several established fictional characters from contemporary American Literature, namely: Salinger's Holden Caulfield, Hemingway's Robert Jordan, Fitzgerald's Dick Diver, Updike's Harry "Rabbit" Angstrom, Roth's Nathan Zuckerman, Richard Ford's Frank Bascomb, and Maurice Sendak's Max and Mickey. Like Roiphe I am a booklover of epic proportions and know all these classic characters. The only one I don't know is Dick Diver, and I probably never will, since even The Great Gatsby never really engaged me, so I doubt if, at this late stage of my life, I really want to read Tender Is the Night. Her title is, of course, an amalgam of Updike and Salinger, and I did feel that perhaps she felt the closest to those two characters: Harry Angstrom and Holden Caulfield. (Salinger's precocious and weird Glass family I was never quite so crazy about, and I suspect neither was Roiphe.) She feels an inordinate affection and protectiveness toward the big clueless Rabbit, despite what she sees as a subtly veiled anti-Semitism here and there in the tetralogy, a subject that arises in the Roth chapter too. Well, me too, Anne, about loving Harry, I mean. I loved all of the Rabbit books and remember being quite devastated when Updike killed him off in Rabbit at RestT. I always hoped he might write a more complete 'prequel' about Harry's high school and army days. No such luck, since Updike himself is now gone - another devastating blow back in ...

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About this book
Pages 240
Publisher Free Press
Published 2000
Readers 3