Editor James Schiff and managing editor Nicola Mason have done it again, assembling another fine issue of The John Updike Review. Volume 11: 2 (Fall 2025) that was published this week.
The new issue spotlights works that are written about less often than the titles Updike is best known for, featuring essays on Marry Me: A Romance (Nadia Szold); Marry Me, Couples and The Witches of Eastwick (Sylvie Mathé), Licks of Love (Peter J. Bailey); and “My Father’s Tears” and “The Laughter of the Gods” (Robert Milder).
The focus of “Three Writers On” this issue is “My Father’s Tears,” from Updike’s final short story collection by the same name, with the story reprinted by permission and short essays from D. Quentin Miller, Sue Norton, and James Schiff.
As always, members of The John Updike Society who reside in the U.S. will receive a print copy by mail, while those outside the U.S. will receive a digital copy. To receive the journal, simply become a member of the society. For an institutional membership, please contact James Schiff: james.schiff@uc.edu. Schiff said that since members are convening in New York City this coming weekend for The Roth-Updike Conference, he will try to bring copies so that our international members can have a print copy of the new issue. The John Updike Review is published twice a year by the University of Cincinnati and the John Updike Society and is based at the University of Cincinnati, Dept. of English and Comparative Literature.




Updike collectors take note: The extensive collection of Michael Broomfield (of Broomfield & De Bellis bibliography fame) is for sale, item-by-item, from
Maria Lester, director of The John Updike Childhood Home that is owned and operated by the 501c3 John Updike Society, received word recently that the museum at 117 Philadelphia Ave. in Shillington, Pa. was awarded a $25,000 Chairman’s Grant from the head of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
On July 14, 2025, Virginia Pye posted an interview she did with writer Anne Bernays for Cambridge Day: “We had fun.” Bernays is a longtime resident of the Boston area and the author of 10 novels, two books of nonfiction with her husband Justin Kaplan, and a book on the craft of writing with fellow Cambridge author Pamela Painter.
John Updike Society president James Plath spent two weeks as a fall 2023 Quarry Farm Fellow working on an essay detailing how Twain modeled being a celebrity writer for both Hemingway and Updike. Plath conducted that research, but also felt compelled to write poems about the house and its inhabitants. Not surprisingly, Updike found his way into one of the poems:
Sometimes the most interesting takes on an author come from great thinkers outside the field of literature. Such is the case with an article by Kali DuBois that was published in Medium: