Minggu, 27 Desember 2015

? PDF Ebook The Centaur, by John Updike

PDF Ebook The Centaur, by John Updike

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The Centaur, by John Updike

The Centaur, by John Updike



The Centaur, by John Updike

PDF Ebook The Centaur, by John Updike

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The Centaur, by John Updike

  • Sales Rank: #4236426 in Books
  • Published on: 1964
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Mass Market Paperback
  • 222 pages

Most helpful customer reviews

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
One of Updike's best books, THE CENTAUR is the opposite of RABBIT
By olingerstories
One of Updike's best books, THE CENTAUR is the opposite of RABBIT, RUN. Harry Angstrom, Rabbit, seeks self-gratification. George Caldwell does his duty. One runs, the other plods. Both find themselves caught. Updike adds the touch of inserting into the narrative the story of Chiron and the greek gods. Wonderfully done, very touching.

8 of 9 people found the following review helpful.
stunning, stellar, haunting
By A Customer
To say a book is not worth anything simply because modern readers won't be familiar with Greek myths is yet again an indication that the majority of people are imbeciles. If you aren't familiar, get familiar! Dig deeper than most commercial fiction allows. That's the wonderful thing about literature, in particular Updike. You can read this book and not know anything about Greek myths, and it still will be an amazing read. (I normally don't get sad while reading; but one sentence in particular in this book - one sentence! - almost brought me to tears.) If you happen to know Greek mythology, then the underlying symbolism in the novel will have meaning for you beyond the sheer emotion presented in the story.
As a whole, this is a wonderful, complicated book, one I plan on rereading as much as time (and other books) allow.
Also, seriously: yet again, this is proof for me that certain books (i.e. literature) cannot be listened to on tape. There is something within the optical structure of a novel that adds even more depth to the story. There is a reason a paragraph begins and end; a reason why something is in italics, or point-of-view switches from first to third. You lose all that when you listen to it. Try reading it, and maybe you'll see what I'm talking about.

0 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
This one puzzles me.
By Edward F. Weber
I read this book about three weeks ago; so these are my lasting impressions so to speak. This is my first time reading an Updike novel and I haven't taken the time to learn much about him, except to know that he's highly regarded. Nevertheless, halfway through I simply wanted to get it over with. The central character is a high school general science teacher whose class apparently loves him and shows it by shooting a broad tip hunting arrow through his ankle. How this happened is never explained. This is the opening scene: the teacher hobbling down the hall, not to the medical office or to get someone to take him to an emergency room, but to his friendly garage mechanic who uses an acetylene torch to cut through the metal shaft and extract it. I don't remember that he ever went to the doctor at all, except to confirm a previous diagnosis that he is dying, something that he seems to want to believe. What happened to the four steps that begin with denial, anger, et seq? He's so down on himself that he can't realize how good he really is.

There is one hilarious passage that made me laugh out loud and think hopefully that we were into a Catch 22 laugheroo; but no such luck. Instead we get some crazy stuff. Here's a guy so lacking in backbone that his wife persuades him to leave an adequate house in the small town where he teaches and move the family to a rundown farm a half hour drive from his teaching job. It's a farm house where they don't even have indoor plumbing. This commute he makes daily in an old car that has an almost dead battery and you guessed it, the battery is dead on the very day that he just has to be at school on time. He pushes it down a hill to get it started (I did this more than a few times in high school, so it brought back memories, but when it happens again later on in the story it's once too often). But does he buy a new battery? No, he can't because on a teacher's pay he doesn't have two nickels to rub together.

Enter his high school sophomore son, a good kid, actually a very good kid, whose principal fault is an obsession with a freshman girl whose body he is determined to explore in some of her prohibited zones. I could have done without that, but maybe I shouldn't speak for other readers. OK, the kid has more street smarts than his dad. Dad, why don't we just buy a new battery? Why are we trying to get home in a blizzard when we could stay in town with friends? (They ultimately have to when the car can't make it up a snowy hill and they leave it in a drift. Oh, I forgot to mention, the battery was dead when they tried to start out on this ill-fated trip and I forget the weird way that they got it started this time.)

There is some poetic prose now and then. A tangle with the school superintendent. Some sexual mischief (not involving our teacher). Some allusions to Greek mythology. It would have helped if I had remembered a little more from whatever schooling I had on Zeus,Apollo, and their friends. Whatever was Mr. Updike's purpose, maybe that's why I missed it.

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