Sunday, July 31, 2011

"The Humbling" by Philip Roth (August 2011)

Many call this a novella.  It's about a man who in his 60's and is losing his artistic touch for acting.  Philip Roth writes beautifully, but the passages can be quite depressing.   He relates to our most morose and disturbing questions but appears to care deeply about the characters and what they are going through.  I can see atheism in some of his writing too.  

This will be an interesting book to read.  I am now on page 43 of 150, excited about the strange experiences our main character will go through and how he will react.   I am curious whether or not Roth will get too negative, more negative and deterministic than he needs to be.  

Friday, July 22, 2011

"American Pastoral" by Philip Roth (August and September, 2011)


A friend of mine said that she felt that Roth in the novel "Nemesis" was trying to advance his cause for the agenda of atheism.   She said Roth made several references in the novel to logic of atheism and how it apparently makes sense.     I was curious to read  my 2nd Roth novel.  There seemed to be an underlying negativity to his writing which I wanted to understand more comprehensively.   He is obviously a genius, much like John Updike or John Irving.  I think it is an oversimplification to call him an "evil genius."  Let's look at the whole picture, not just part or the picture.

Amazon.com Review

Philip Roth's 22nd book takes a life-long view of the American experience in this thoughtful investigation of the century's most divisive and explosive of decades, the '60s. Returning again to the voice of his literary alter ego Nathan Zuckerman, Roth is at the top of his form. His prose is carefully controlled yet always fresh and intellectually subtle as he reconstructs the halcyon days, circa World War II, of Seymour "the Swede" Levov, a high school sports hero and all-around Great Guy who wants nothing more than to live in tranquillity. But as the Swede grows older and America crazier, history sweeps his family inexorably into its grip: His own daughter, Merry, commits an unpardonable act of "protest" against the Vietnam war that ultimately severs the Swede from any hope of happiness, family, or spiritual coherence.--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Library Journal

In his latest novel, Roth shows his age. Not that his writing is any less vigorous and supple. But in this autumnal tome, he is definitely in a reflective mood, looking backward. As the book opens, Roth's alter ego, Nathan Zuckerman, recalls an innocent time when golden boy Seymour "the Swede" Levov was the pride of his Jewish neighborhood. Then, in precise, painful, perfectly rendered detail, he shows how the Swede's life did not turn out as gloriously as expected?how it was, in fact, devastated by a child's violent act. When Merry Levov blew up her quaint little town's post office to protest the Viet Nam war, she didn't just kill passing physician Fred Conlon, she shattered the ties that bound her to her worshipful father. Merry disappears, then eventually reappears as a stick-thin Jain living in sacred povery in Newark, having killed three more people for the cause. Roth doesn't tell the whole story blow by blow but gives us the essentials in luminous, overlapping bits. In the end, the book positively resonates with the anguish of a father who has utterly lost his daughter. Highly recommended.
-?Barbara Hoffert, "Library Journal"