Of the Farm recounts Joey Robinson's visit to the farm where he grew up and where his mother now lives alone. Accompanied by his newly acquired second wife, Peggy, and an eleven-year-old stepson, Joey spends three days reassessing and evaluating the course his life has run. But for Joey and Peggy, the delicate balance of love and sex is threatened by a dangerous new awareness.
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Of the Farm recounts Joey Robinson's visit to the farm where he grew up and where his mother now lives alone. Accompanied by his newly acquired second wife, Peggy, and an eleven-year-old stepson, Joey spends three days reassessing and evaluating the course his life has run. But for Joey and Peggy, the delicate balance of love and sex is threatened by a dangerous new awareness.
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Add this copy of Of the Farm to cart. $6.00, very good condition, Sold by Bedrock Books & Art rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Helena, MT, UNITED STATES, published 1967 by Fawcett Books.
Add this copy of Of the Farm to cart. $7.00, very good condition, Sold by Robert Harper Books rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Hyattsville, MD, UNITED STATES, published 1977 by Fawcett.
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Very GOOD in NONE jacket. Size: 6x4x0; Clean, unmarked, tight spine and flat pages. Front cover has a crease in center of top edge and small abraded spot.
Add this copy of Of the Farm to cart. $7.39, fair condition, Sold by Ezekial Books, LLC rated 5.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Manchester, NH, UNITED STATES, published 1977 by Fawcett Books.
Add this copy of Of the Farm to cart. $48.44, good condition, Sold by Bonita rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Newport Coast, CA, UNITED STATES, published 1977 by Fawcett.
Of the Farm, this early novel by John Updike, tells the story of a successful Manhattan professional who, with his second wife and her precocious son, visits his mother on the family farm, where memories and accusations ensue.
In a New York Review of Books essay, British novelist Ian McEwan praises Updike's voracious eye for detail, even in the sex scenes, which have outraged some feminists for the narrative "male gaze."
This isn't my objection so much as the author's penchant for overwriting and strained metaphors.
There's no question that Updike is often masterful at anatomizing cross-generational familial conflicts, but as perhaps might be expected in an American novel of the early Sixties, the author's rendering of female consciousness is quite traditional in his women characters' male dependence, emasculating power or supposed inferior intellect. Some of the protagonist's reveries about his wife's body as a landscape are frankly embarrassing. At one point, the protagonist looks at the scudding Pennsylvania clouds, seeing one that evokes "lawyers at loggerheads." Toward the end the novel takes a theological turn.
This reviewer has inestimable respect for Updike the critic, and as the author of the Rabbit tetralogy. His command of genres is comparable to a man of letters such as Edmund Wilson. But it may well be that his prodigious production was also something of a weakness, because some of the later novels received awful reviews.
The late novelist David Foster Wallace grouped Updike with Mailer and Roth as among the Great American Narcissists; that is, Updike's protagonists often seemed versions of the author himself. Even in the Rabbit novels, the deliberately limited perspective causes Updike to stereotype Japanese businessmen and, arguably, blacks in Rabbit, Redux. Women and ethnic novelists provide a necessary counterbalance to Updike's vision of America.