Novelist’s best kiss: John Updike

Rosanna Greenstreet of The Guardian recently played 23 questions with novelist Ann Patchett, whose novels The Magician’s Assistant, Bel Canto, and State of Wonder were shortlisted for the Orange Prize for Fiction (now the Women’s Prize for Fiction), and this interesting exchange popped up:

What was the best kiss of your life?
I kissed John Updike as he presented me with an award. It wasn’t the best kiss as far as kisses go, but I hold the fact that I kissed John Updike, that he kissed me, very close to my heart.

Well, there’s a new spin on the old phrase kiss-and-tell. . . .

The rest of her responses are below:

“Ann Patchett: My best kiss? I kissed John Updike as he presented me with an award.” 

New De Bellis book on Updike slated for summer release

John Updike Remembered:  Friends, Family and Colleagues Reflect on the Writer and the Man, edited by Jack De Bellis, will be published this summer by McFarland Books and is now available to pre-order. The softcover volume features 53 remembrances that “present a prismatic view of the two-time Pulitzer Prize winner and his work through anecdote and insight” as “interviews and essays from family, friends and associates reveal sides of the novelist perhaps unfamiliar to the public—Updike the high school prankster, the golfer, the creator of bedtime stories, the charming ironist, the faithful correspondent with scholars, the devoted friend and the dedicated practitioner of his craft,” as described on the McFarland website. List price is $29.95.

“Contributors include: his first wife, Mary Pennington, and three of their children; high school and college friends; authors John Barth, Joyce Carol Oates and Nicholson Baker; journalists Terri Gross and Ann Goldstein; and scholars Jay Parini, William Pritchard, James Plath, and Adam Begley, Updike’s biographer.”

De Bellis, who is Professor Emeritus of English at Lehigh University, was a founder of The John Updike Society and served on the board of directors from 2009-14. A member of the editorial board of The John Updike Review, he is best known among scholars for the books he has edited or written on Updike:

John Updike, 1967-1993: A Bibliography of Primary and Secondary Sources (Greenwood Publishing Group, 1994)
The John Updike Encyclopedia (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2000)
John Updike: The Critical Responses to the “Rabbit” Saga (Oak Knoll Press, 2003)
John Updike: A Bibliography of Primary and Secondary Materials, 1948-2007, co-authored by Michael Broomfield (Oak Knoll Press, 2008)
John Updike’s Early Years (Lehigh University Press, 2013)

Have you seen this child . . . John Updike?

If not and you’re a member of The John Updike Society, it ought to be arriving soon. Volume 5: Number 1 (Winter 2017) of The John Updike Review is out now, featuring:

“A Word from the Editor”—James Schiff
“Summer 1974, in Fiction and Memory”—David Updike
“A Conversation with John Updike in Moscow”—Ward Briggs & J. Alexander Ogden
“Updike in Venice”—John Philip Drury
“John Updike’s Broadsides: The Blackness of Death and Bath after Sailing“—Donald J. Greiner

plus “Three Writers on Villages“:
“Programmed Delirium: Villages and the God of Multilevel Selection”—Marshall Boswell
“Dreams, Conflated Wives, Lingering Guilt, and Coitus Recalled in Updike’s Villages”—James Schiff
“Seduction in John Updike’s Villages“—Aristi Trendel

and reviews by Sue Norton (The Violet Hour: Great Writers at the End, by Katie Roiphe) and Laurence W. Mazzeno (Myth and Gospel in the Fiction of John Updike, by John McTavish).

The refereed journal, which publishes the very best of current Updike criticism and articles, is free with membership in The John Updike Society. It’s published twice annually by the University of Cincinnati and The John Updike Society and based at the University of Cincinnati Department of English and Comparative Literature. For institutional subscriptions contact James Schiff, james.schiff@uc.edu.

Shurbanov added as keynote for JUS Conference in Serbia

Distinguished poet, writer, translator, and Shakespearian scholar Alexander Shurbanov, who translated John Updike’s novel Gertrude and Claudius into Bulgarian, will be featured as a keynote speaker at the Fifth Biennial John Updike Society Conference in Serbia. The conference, 1-4 June 2018, will be sponsored and hosted by the Faculty of Philology at the University of Belgrade.

Not only did Shurbanov, now Professor Emeritus at the University of Sofia in Bulgaria, correspond with Updike while translating Gertrude and Claudius, but he was also a longtime friend of Blaga Dimitrova, the prototype of Vera Glavanakova from Updike’s O. Henry Award-winning story “The Bulgarian Poetess.”

Shurbanov, who has also taught at the University of London, UCLA, and SUNY-Albany, has translated 14 texts ranging from Chaucer, Shakespeare, and the Magna Carta to Tales by Beatrix Potter and poetry by Milton, Coleridge, Dylan Thomas, Ted Hughes, and Rabindranath Tagore. As a poet and essayist he is also the author of 18 collections, including three bilingual Bulgarian-English titles:  Frost-Flowers (Princeton, 2001), Beware: Cats (Sofia, 2001), and most recently Foresun: Selected Poems in Bulgarian and English (Sofia, 2016).

From 1972-2009, Shurbanov taught at the University of Sofia, where he received The Honorary Medal of Sofia University in 2001. He is also the recipient of numerous other awards, including The Danov National Award for Overall Contribution to Culture (2007), The Geo Miley National Literary Award (2015), and The Portal Kultura Special Prize for Notable Achievements in Poetry and Translation (2016).

Along with celebrated writer Ian McEwan, who was announced earlier as a keynote speaker, the addition of Professor Shurbanov gives the conference two top-flight presenters that should appeal to both society members and devotees of literature. Like Updike, whom he knew, McEwan worked in multiple genres, the author of 14 novels, three short story collections, two plays, two children’s books, five screenplays—even a libretto. Among his numerous awards are the Booker Prize for his eighth novel, Amsterdam (1998); the Jerusalem Prize for the Freedom of the Individual in Society (2011); and the 50th Anniversary Gold Medal from the University of Sussex. Long an advocate for Updike’s legacy and an admitted beneficiary of Updike’s influence, McEwan is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, the Royal Society of Arts, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. His most recent novel is Nutshell (2016)—which retells the story of Shakespeare’s Hamlet from the point of view of an unborn child.

Though membership in the society is required to attend the conference, The John Updike Society is an inclusive organization whose members are teachers, professors, writers, theologians, independent scholars, Updike family and friends, collectors, and the kind of just-plain-readers that Updike always appreciated. The society previously held conferences in Columbia, S.C., Boston, and Reading, Pa. (twice). This will be the first time members will meet outside the U.S.

Call for papers