Academy of Achievement Logo
Home
Achiever Gallery
   + [ The Arts ]
  Business
  Public Service
  Science & Exploration
  Sports
  Find Your Mentor
  Recommended Books
  Academy Careers
Keys to Success
Achievement Podcasts
About the Academy
For Teachers

Search the site

Academy Careers

 

If you like John Updike's story, you might also like:
John Grisham,
Norman Mailer,
W.S. Merwin,
James Michener,
Joyce Carol Oates
and Carol Shields

John Updike's recommended reading: The Waste Land

Related Links:
Updike Home Page

Pulitzer Prizes

The Academy of American Poets

Our Most Viewed Honorees:
Maya Angelou
Benazir Bhutto
Johnny Cash
Benjamin Carson
Sir Edmund Hillary
Quincy Jones
Hamid Karzai
Coretta Scott King
George Lucas
Willie Mays
Frank McCourt
Antonia Novello
Rosa Parks
Colin Powell
Jonas Salk
Amy Tan
Desmond Tutu
James Watson
Elie Wiesel
Oprah Winfrey
John Wooden
Chuck Yeager

John Updike
 
John Updike
Profile of John Updike Biography of John Updike Interview with John Updike John Updike Photo Gallery

John Updike Profile

Two Pulitzer Prizes for Fiction

Print John Updike Profile Print Profile

  John Updike

"My mother had dreams of being a writer and I used to see her type in the front room. The front room is also where I would go when I was sick so I would sit there and watch her."

Novelist, short story writer and poet, John Updike is one of America's premier men of letters. As a boy growing up on a farm in Pennsylvania, he suffered from psoriasis and a stammer, ailments that set him apart from his peers. He found solace in writing, and won a scholarship to Harvard, where he edited the Lampoon humor magazine. He sold his first poem and short story to The New Yorker shortly after graduation.

He won early fame with his novel Rabbit, Run (1960), and Pulitzer Prizes for two of its sequels, Rabbit is Rich (1981) and Rabbit at Rest (1990), chronicling the life of a middle class American through the social upheavals of the 1960s and beyond. Rabbit, Run and Couples (1968) both stirred controversy with their forthright depiction of America's changing sexual mores, and established his reputation as a peerless observer of the human complexity behind the facade of ostensibly conventional lives. His fiction, poetry and essays also show a persistent interest in moral and philosophical questions, informed by a lifelong interest in Christian theology.

John Updike is one of very few Americans to be honored with both the National Medal of Art and the National Medal for the Humanities. As of this writing, he has published more thn 60 books. The Early Stories, 1953-1975, published in 2004, collects the short fiction from the first two decades of his career. As large a volume as it is, it represents only a small part of his vast contribution to American literature.




This page last revised on Feb 02, 2005 13:54 PST