http://www.salon.com/2012/11/09/philip_roth_im_done/To keep things sportsy, there was a review in the
New York Review of Books three or four years ago that compared Roth to a pitcher who lost his fastball but learned to be a crafty finesse guy. That sounds almost about right to me, though I'll put the Zuckerman trilogy, specifically
The Human Stain, right up there among his fiery best, though
Portnoy's Complaint is really on a level all its own.
The last book of his I read was
Indignation, which, while it had its moments (specifically when our protagonist, here as always a nice Jewish boy gone bad from the streets of Newark, gets an hj in a hospital bed from his goyish girlfriend and unloads on an unwitting nurse), falls victim to the sinking feeling you get with late-era Roth, that you've seen this movie before. I'm not just using a figure of speech: the aforementioned hospital scene might have been in an
American Pie movie.
So I'm kinda glad he's going out on his own terms and not just ending his career with his death. I'll try to catch up with the books I missed now that this is it. I hope he has a nice retirement. One of the greatest American authors, and one of my top five authors, no question.
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Molly Lambert wrote:
The future holds the possibility to be great or terrible, and since it has not yet occurred it remains simultaneously both.