John Updike: American Writer, American Life

Bob Batchelor

John Updike is one of America's greatest writers and critics. Join cultural historian Bob Batchelor for a deep dive into the author's life, work, complexities, and controversies. This podcast tackles the most urgent questions facing literature and pop culture in contemporary America and where culture goes from here.

Episodes

  1. 2D AGO

    The American Dream Across Four Decades with Updike and Rabbit Angstrom

    This episode of John Updike: American Writer, American Life takes you inside all four Rabbit novels: Rabbit, Run (1960), Rabbit Redux (1971), Rabbit Is Rich (1981), and Rabbit at Rest (1990). One man. Four decades. One country watching its promises wear out. The 1950s - Certainty and Its Discontents: Harry at 26, former basketball glory fading, trapped in a marriage and a job selling worthless kitchen gadgets. The novel ends with him running—desperate motion without destination. Updike's diagnosis of the Eisenhower era: a decade of certainty that turned out to be made of nothing solid at all. The 1960s - The Burning House: Harry at 36, standing his ground as the world detonates around him. Vietnam. Civil rights. The drug culture. A runaway girl named Jill and a militant vet named Skeeter move into his house. The house burns down. Jill dies. The expanded American Dream of the Great Society collides with everything that can't be fixed by ideology. The decade exhausts itself. The 1970s - The Dream Goes Sour: Harry at 46, running a Toyota dealership, afraid of running out of gas. Golf has replaced basketball. Gold coins have replaced transcendence. God has become "a raisin lost under the car seat." Prosperity, hollow at its center. The most devastating insight: to be rich is to be robbed. The 1980s - The Hollow Years: Harry at 56 in Reagan's America. Heart disease. His son's cocaine addiction. Florida condos and cable TV. "Most of American life is driving somewhere and then driving back wondering why the hell you went." The appearance of prosperity. Beneath it, the void. The last word of the final novel: "Enough." Updike never wrote a better sentence than this one from Rabbit at Rest: Harry is "a mundane Jay Gatsby whose daily dissatisfaction cloaks a lifelong spiritual yearning." That's what these four novels track—what America does to its dreamers. Not the triumph version. Not the Thomas Jefferson brochure. The real one. The daily one. The one with the gas lines and bad jobs and slow erosion of the belief that things were supposed to keep getting better. The dream doesn't die in Updike. It diminishes. It gets worn down by decades of promise and disappointment. But it persists—stubborn, irrational, maybe necessary. Four novels. Four decades. One long meditation on the cost of carrying hope across a lifetime in America. Please subscribe wherever you like to listen and leave a review if this episode has entertained you. Bob Batchelor is an Assistant Professor of Communication, Media, & Culture at Coastal Carolina University. He is the author of John Updike: A Critical Biography.

    13 min
  2. FEB 11

    Why You Should Be Reading John Updike: The Writer Who Predicted Everything

    John Updike wrote some of the most precise, unsettling, and prophetic fiction in American literature—and most people under forty have never heard of him. That gap is what this podcast exists to close. John Updike: American Writer, American Life is a literary podcast for readers, thinkers, and anyone who wants to understand the hidden architecture of American culture. Hosted by cultural historian and Updike biographer Bob Batchelor, each episode is focused, sharp, and built for listeners who want to dive into the life and career of one of America's greatest writers. John Updike published more than 20 novels, hundreds of short stories, and volumes of criticism, poetry, and essays across five decades. He won the Pulitzer Prize twice—for Rabbit Is Rich (1982) and Rabbit at Rest (1991)—and became the defining chronicler of middle-class American life in the twentieth century. His four-novel Rabbit tetralogy (Rabbit, Run; Rabbit Redux; Rabbit Is Rich; Rabbit at Rest) follows one ordinary man, Harry “Rabbit” Angstrom, across 40 years of American history. Together, these four books form a masterpiece: a portrait of the nation that is more honest, more painful, and more relevant than almost anything written since. Updike saw the death of American manufacturing. He wrote about economic anxiety before it became a political movement. He diagnosed the collapse of masculine identity before the culture had a vocabulary for it. He saw the 1970s energy crisis, not as a temporary inconvenience, but as a permanent reckoning with American assumptions about prosperity and progress. And he did it all in beautiful, lyrial sentences. He also wrote things that make contemporary readers uncomfortable. His male characters objectify and flee. His perspective is overwhelmingly white and suburban. This podcast doesn’t hide from those tensions. It engages them, because honest conversations about American literature require addressing human complexity, not running from it. Each episode takes one aspect of Updike’s life, work, or world and opens it up: the Pennsylvania mill town that shaped him, the New Yorker years that refined his voice, the feminist critique that shadowed his reputation, the beautiful and brutal sentences that remain his most enduring legacy. From the Rabbit novels to Couples to Terrorist—from Updike’s poetry to his art criticism—no corner of the work is off limits. Whether you’re a longtime reader returning to Updike with fresh eyes, a student encountering his fiction for the first time, or a curious listener who wants to understand why a novelist who died in 2009 still has something urgent to say about the America we’re living in right now—this podcast is for you. Subscribe now and never miss an episode. Leave a review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify to help other readers find the show. Want to dig deeper? Follow Bob Batchelor at bobbatchelor.com for essays, book recommendations, and updates on the podcast. Bob Batchelor is a cultural historian, biographer, and professor at Coastal Carolina University. He is the author of John Updike: A Critical Biography (2013) and has spent more than three decades researching Updike’s life and legacy—including a doctoral dissertation on Updike’s vision of American culture. His books on Jim Morrison and The Doors (Roadhouse Blues), Stan Lee, Bob Dylan, The Great Gatsby, and Prohibition-era bootlegger George Remus (The Bourbon King) have been translated into more than a dozen languages. He is also the host of the podcasts Tales of the Bourbon King and Theories of Celebrity Branding. Batchelor has appeared on PBS NewsHour, NPR, the BBC, and the National Geographic Channel. His writing has been published in Time, the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, and PopMatters. He brings the same rigor, cultural authority, and narrative drive to this podcast that he brings to his books—designed to bring America's icons and myths to life for a new generation of thinkers!

    11 min
  3. 04/01/2021

    Episode 2: Falling in Love with John Updike

    Before the pandemic turned 2020 into a strange, chaotic mess, I made the decision to read some bit of John Updike's work every single day of the year, whether that turned out to be a few lines or hundreds of pages each day. I can't fully explain why, but the idea primarily came from my need to travel American history with Updike and relish in the beautiful sentences he composed over the course a lifetime.  Long ago, in what seems now like a strange twist of fate, I fell in love with John Updike. Rabbit, Run simply knocked me off my feet at a time when my own life seemed to swirl out of control. The novel didn't fix my problems, but the words gave me insight into how I wanted to live my life. And, perhaps more important, reading about the erstwhile Rabbit Angstrom kicked off a love affair with Updike's work that has nourished me ever since.  In "Falling in Love with John Updike," I want to share that early story with you and -- perhaps -- give you cause to pick up one of Updike's many works and dive in.  On another note... I am incredibly honored to present the fantastic piano introduction, called "Swing Of The Hip," written and played by Evan Palazzo. Evan is the band leader and pianist of The Hot Sardines, the band he and front woman, singer extraordinaire Elizabeth Bougerol created to play the great jazz classics of a century ago along with their own originals. If you love jazz, you've probably seen The Hot Sardines at one of their many global tour stops or listened to them rip live, which I'll guarantee you, is a concert experience you will never forget! For my money, The Hot Sardines are simply the best jazz band playing today! For more information about The Hot Sardines, visit them online at www.hotsardines.com or at Facebook or Instagram where thousands of followers gather to get the latest news, music, and information about the band.

    45 min

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About

John Updike is one of America's greatest writers and critics. Join cultural historian Bob Batchelor for a deep dive into the author's life, work, complexities, and controversies. This podcast tackles the most urgent questions facing literature and pop culture in contemporary America and where culture goes from here.