Rabbit Angstrom #1-4

Rabbit Angstrom: The Four Novels

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When we first met him in Rabbit, Run (1960), the book that established John Updike as a major novelist, Harry (Rabbit) Angstrom is playing basketball with some boys in an alley in Pennsylvania during the tail end of the Eisenhower era, reliving for a moment his past as a star high school athlete. Athleticism of a different sort is on display throughout these four magnificent novels—the athleticism of an imagination possessed of the ability to lay bare, with a seemingly effortless animal grace, the enchantments and disenchantments of life.

Updike revisited his hero toward the end of each of the following decades in the second half of this American century; and in each of the subsequent novels, as Rabbit, his wife, Janice, his son, Nelson, and the people around them grow, these characters take on the lineaments of our common existence. In prose that is one of the glories of contemporary literature, Updike has chronicled the frustrations and ambiguous triumphs, the longuers, the loves and frenzies, the betrayals and reconciliations of our era. He has given us our representative American story.

This Rabbit Angstrom volume is composed of the following novels: Rabbit, Run; Rabbit Redux; Rabbit is Rich; and Rabbit at Rest.

1520 pages, Hardcover

First published October 17,1994

This edition

Format
1520 pages, Hardcover
Published
October 17, 1995 by Everyman's Library
ISBN
9780679444596
ASIN
0679444599
Language
English

About the author

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John Hoyer Updike was an American writer. Updike's most famous work is his Rabbit series (Rabbit, Run; Rabbit Redux; Rabbit Is Rich; Rabbit At Rest; and Rabbit Remembered). Rabbit is Rich and Rabbit at Rest both won Pulitzer Prizes for Updike. Describing his subject as "the American small town, Protestant middle class," Updike is well known for his careful craftsmanship and prolific writing, having published 22 novels and more than a dozen short story collections as well as poetry, literary criticism and children's books. Hundreds of his stories, reviews, and poems have appeared in The New Yorker since the 1950s. His works often explore sex, faith, and death, and their inter-relationships.

He died of lung cancer at age 76.

Community Reviews

Rating(4 / 5.0, 100 votes)
5 stars
34(34%)
4 stars
33(33%)
3 stars
33(33%)
2 stars
0(0%)
1 stars
0(0%)
100 reviews All reviews
July 15,2025
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Ok, the five-star rating is overall for the four novels.
Rabbit, Run is approximately 300 pages and it is a great read. Indeed, if you analyze a typical Updike novel, not much seems to happen, and this is especially the case with the Rabbit series. However, that's not the reason why anyone reads his books. The prose here slowly creates a nice picture.
Rabbit Redux - I truly hated it. It was far too random and was the strangest and worst book of the series. Unfortunately, it needs to be read to understand the connection to the third and fourth books.
Rabbit is Rich - This is the coolest of the series. Rabbit has some style, yet still resents his wife as always. The Toyota dealership is at its peak.
Rabbit at Rest - It is an interesting book. The end had me guessing and it was definitely a page-turner.
In conclusion, the Rabbit series by John Updike offers a diverse range of reading experiences. Each book has its own unique characteristics, from the slow and beautiful prose of Rabbit, Run to the more complex and sometimes frustrating Rabbit Redux. Rabbit is Rich brings a touch of style and Rabbit at Rest keeps the reader engaged until the very end. Overall, it is a series that is worth exploring for those who enjoy character-driven novels with a focus on the human condition.

July 15,2025
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Rabbit Angstrom: The Four Novels by John Updike

Rabbit, Run

A young and immature man, once a hot-shot high school athlete, has a pregnant wife and a 2 ½-year-old son. One night, on a whim, he decides to flee instead of picking up his son from his parents. The world depicted in this novel seems to operate without any morality, where selfishness reigns supreme. The degenerate characters are far from being sympathetic. As I read this book, I felt degraded to the level of the indefensible Rabbit. Maybe it was due to Updike's use of the present tense or his over-reliance on adjectives and adverbs. His characters are as shallow as hoarfrost and thus evoke no sympathy. A sense of hollowness pervades throughout. It doesn't elevate the spirit. So, why should I read it? To be sympathetic to the immoral? A more engrossing read would be a book about how it came to be that Updike had this and successive novels of Rabbit published. That is the great mystery.



Rabbit Redux

Gad, it's more of the same crap. I just can't read anymore Updike. It's horribly boring.

July 15,2025
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This is one of those books that I firmly believed I had to read in order to be well-versed in literature.

I am by no means an expert on that particular period of literature, yet I can clearly perceive why it is regarded as significant.

The book is written in the first person, presenting a visual prose style that meanders as if it is flowing directly from the random thoughts of our brain, unfiltered by any censor.

Moreover, it is dark and disturbing, featuring characters that I couldn't quite connect with or have any hope for.

Consequently, I have no intentions of reading the sequels.

Perhaps I will explore other works within the same genre to gain a more comprehensive understanding of literature during that era.

However, for now, this particular book has left me with a somewhat uneasy feeling, making me question whether it truly represents the essence of that literary period.

Nonetheless, I am glad that I took the time to read it, as it has expanded my literary horizons and made me more aware of the diverse range of styles and themes that exist within the world of literature.
July 15,2025
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Probably four of the very best modern novels I have ever read.

These novels have truly left a profound impact on me. Each one has its own unique charm and appeal.

The first novel is a masterpiece that takes the reader on an emotional rollercoaster. The characters are so vividly portrayed that you feel as if you know them personally.

The second novel has a captivating plot that keeps you on the edge of your seat from beginning to end. The twists and turns are unexpected and add to the overall excitement.

The third novel explores deep themes and makes you think about life in a whole new way. It has a beautiful writing style that is both engaging and thought-provoking.

The fourth novel is a heartwarming story that will make you laugh and cry at the same time. It has a message of love and hope that is truly inspiring.

Overall, these four novels are some of the best that modern literature has to offer. I would highly recommend them to anyone who loves to read.
July 15,2025
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Two of these four novels, which chronicle much of the everyday texture of American life from the 1930s to the 1980s, have won the Pulitzer Prize. In addition, they have received other kudos such as the National Book Award.

As a 70-year-old, I found Rabbit Angstrom's musings on death and mortality to be thought-provoking. However, Rabbit was so disgusting, misogynistic, pathetic, and self-centered that I was glad to finally finish the fourth book.

These novels offer a unique perspective on American society during a specific time period. They explore the lives and experiences of ordinary people, highlighting both the joys and sorrows of everyday life.

The Pulitzer Prize and other awards recognize the literary merit of these works, which have become classics of American literature. Despite my mixed feelings about Rabbit Angstrom, I appreciate the skill and artistry with which these novels were written.

Overall, these four novels are an important part of American literary history and continue to be studied and enjoyed by readers today.
July 15,2025
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I initially read books 1 and 2 in a different volume. However, I picked up this one because it was used and ended up being $10 cheaper than buying the paperback versions of 3 and 4. After finishing it, I've switched to reading on my new Kindle. The contrast between this 1500-page behemoth and the Kindle makes reading on the Kindle feel almost like cheating.


But perhaps the weight of this novel is a good thing. It makes you work for closure on Rabbit's life, rather than breezing through it. I will admit, though, that I spent a great deal longer reading this book than I should have considering its excellent contents. If anyone has any tips on comfortable positions for reading a giant hardbound book, I'm all ears.


Parts 3 and 4 of Rabbit's life were not as captivating to me as parts 1 and 2. My theory is that I can more easily relate to the younger Rabbit. So in the earlier books, I was constantly on edge about what came next, as if our fates as lost young people were intertwined. In these novels, Rabbit is older. He is stable and happy, well, not that happy, but the kind of happy that comes from stability. Updike's brilliance lies in his ability to capture Rabbit's voice so well while still allowing it to age. The Rabbit I read about retired in Florida is still the Rabbit who runs away from his wife at the beginning of book 1, but different in so many ways.


What this book(s) does is shatter the notion that there is any kind of certainty in life. Some things become more certain, but each "step" of life opens up new areas of uncertainty. Early on, you start a family and a career. In mid-life, you must come to terms with the fact that this is what your life has become and there isn't much room for change, etc. Reading this series was the closest I've ever come to watching a person grow up, and it was both fascinating and horrifying to realize that the early adult years are just the beginning of confusion and uncertainty.


Overall, this book is much too long and interesting to do it justice in a short Goodreads review. It's also one of those books that I imagine will take on more meaning later in life. Perhaps I will save this hardbound copy and return to it in 15 years to find that books 1 and 2 no longer excite me, but I can't put down books 3 and 4. The changing life philosophy of Rabbit is evident in the quotes, and that's what most interests me. So without further ado...


Favorite bits:


"But a lot of topics, he has noticed lately, in private conversation and even on television where they're paid to talk it up, run dry, exhaust themselves, as if everything's been said in this hemisphere." -pg.631


"But one of their bonds has always been that her confusion keeps pace with his. As the wind pours past he feels a scared swift love for something that has no name. Her? His life? The world?" -pg.684


"I pretty much like what I have. The trouble with that is, then you get afraid somebody will take it away from you." -pg.685


"The world keeps ending but new people too dumb to know it keep showing up as if the fun's just started." -pg.700


"Then he remembers, descending into the molecules, what love feels like: huge, skin on skin, planets impinging." -pg.705


"Freedom, that he always thought was outward motion, turns out to be this inner dwindling." -pg.708


"He does not know if he loved her or not, but with her he had known love, had experienced that cloudy, inflation of self which makes us infants again and tips each moment with a plain excited purpose, as these wands of grass about his knees are tipped with packets of their own fine seeds." -pg.722


"Town after town numbingly demonstrated to him that his life was a paltry thing, roughly duplicated by the millions." -pg.743


"You never return to the same place." -pg.764


"Funny about feelings, they seem to come and go in a flash yet outlast metal." -pg.768


"From a certain angle the most terrifying thing in the world is your own life, the fact that it's yours and nobody else's." -pg.785


"'I must say,' Janice says, 'it does seem extravagant, to build such a thing you're only going to use once.' 'That's life.' Harry says." -pg.845


"What more can you ask of a wife in a way than that she stick around and see with you what happens next?" -pg.856


"You don't stop caring, champ. You still care about that little girl whose underpants you saw in kindergarten. Once you care, you always care. That's how stupid we are." -pg.866


"..his own life close in to a size his soul had not yet shrunk to fit." -pg.879


"Pru had none of that false savvy, she knew none of the names to drop, the fancy dead, and could talk only about what was alive now." -pg.906


"...families, doing everything for each other out of imagined obligation and always getting in each other's way, what a tangle." -pg.914


"Life. Too much of it, and not enough. The fear that it will end some day, and the fear that tomorrow will be the same as yesterday." -pg.942


"The great sad lie told to children that is Christmas stains Weiser end to end, and through the murk he glimpses the truth that to be rich is to be robbed, to be rich is to be poor." -pg.961


"People are always a little sicker than you know." -pg.995


"Harry suddenly hates people who seem to know; they would keep us blind to the fact that there is nothing to know. We are each of us filled with a perfect blackness." -pg.1007


"Both know, what people should never know, that they will not meet again." -pg.1029


"What you lose as you age is witnesses, the ones that watched from early on and cared, like your own little grandstand." -pg.1041


"The more dead you know it seems the more living there are you don't know." -pg.1041


"He knows her so well that making conversation with her is like having a struggle with himself." -pg.1072


"'Driving is boring,' Rabbit pontificates, 'but it's what we do. Most of American life is driving somewhere and then driving back wondering why the hell you went.'" -pg.1074


"Funny how your wife reading the newspaper makes every item in it look fascinating, and then when you look yourself it all turns dull." -pg.1096


"All this family closeness is almost like an African hut where everybody sleeps and screws in full view of everybody else. But, then, Harry asks himself, what has Western man done with all his precious privacy, anyway? To judge from his history books, nothing much except invent the gun and psychoanalysis." -pg.1096


"...the things he looks at all seem tired; he's seen them too many times before. A kind of drought has settled over the world, a bleaching such as overtakes old color prints, even the ones kept in drawer." -pg.1099


"If you could ever get the poor to vote in this country, you'd have socialism. But people want to think rich. That's the genius of the capitalist system: either you're rich, or you want to be, or you think you ought to be." -pg.1104


"The solider in Harry, the masochistic Christian, respects men like this. It's total uncritical love, such as women provide, that makes you soft and does you in." -pg.1106


"...perhaps that is the saddest loss time brings, the lessening of excitement about anything." -pg.1153


"What's a life supposed to be? They don't give you another for comparison." -pg.1207


"In crises there is something in our instincts which whittles, which tries to reduce the unignorable event back to the ignorable normal." -pg.1280


"We are each of us like our little blue planet, hung in black space, upheld by nothing but our mutual reassurances, our loving lies." -pg.1290


"Innocence is just an early age of stupidity." -pg.1313


"You're a man, you're free, you can do what you want in life, until you're sixty at least you're a buyer. A woman's a seller. She has to be. And she better not haggle too long." -pg.1362

July 15,2025
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I finished the series in March 2010.

Looking back, I don't recall ever experiencing such a profound sense of connection to the characters in a book or a series of books.

As I delved deeper into the story, I gradually developed a feeling as if I knew the Angstroms on a personal level, as if they were old family friends.

I found myself emotionally invested in their lives, rooting for them with the same enthusiasm and sincerity as I would for my own friends.

Their joys and sorrows became my own, and I was completely immersed in their world.

This unique connection made the reading experience truly unforgettable, and it left a lasting impression on me.

Even now, years after finishing the series, I still think of the Angstroms and their story with a sense of warmth and nostalgia.

It's as if they have become a part of my own personal history, and I will always cherish the time I spent getting to know them.

July 15,2025
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I now realize that I was overly optimistic when I borrowed the compilation of the four Rabbit novels. In fact, one is more than enough, and perhaps even excessive. After this experience, I find myself in need of some non-fiction works, although I'm not typically a non-fiction reader.


The main character in this story is a selfish and unlikeable individual, and his motives are, at best, rather obscure. It remains a mystery as to why the supporting cast would bother to stick around. He is truly cruel.


Maybe it's time for me to explore the world of non-fiction and see what new perspectives and knowledge it can offer. Who knows, perhaps I'll discover a new genre that I truly enjoy.

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