Thursday, March 19, 2009

In the March 16th issue of The New Yorker, amidst articles on the fashion world, are nine poems by the late John Updike on the subject of his impending death, four of them sonnets. Years ago I heard Updike read his poems as part of a series at the University of Pittsburgh. In the front row of the audience sat his elderly mother, so often a figure in his work. Listening to him, looking at her, was an oddly moving experience, like seeing a fictional character come to life. This last poetry is very moving, especially since the speaker's voice, so often heard during my lifetime of reading, is no more except in his work. What I loved about Updike, even in the things that I didn't like, was his curiosity about the world and its inhabitants and his apparent belief in the ongoing power of ordinary. Thus in one of these poems, "Peggy Lutz, Fred Muth," he thanks his childhood friends, his classmates, for providing "a sufficiency of human types," which is the end, "all a writer needs." He goes on to claim that it was all a writer needs, that it was "all there in Shillington." I tend to believe that, moreso as the years go on. All we need to do is look around us, which is what Updike always did, even when he was dying.

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