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Read Bech At Bay (1999)

Bech at Bay (1999)

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Author
Series
Rating
3.74 of 5 Votes: 3
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ISBN
044900404X (ISBN13: 9780449004043)
Language
English
Publisher
random house trade paperbacks

Bech At Bay (1999) - Plot & Excerpts

"Bech at Bay" is the last of Updike's Bech trilogy, tales of the life of his libidinous "Jewish" author-persona.After three books, I still have not accepted Bech as a genuine, successfully-realized literary character, much less an authentic Jewish author. I'm still not sure why Updike chose to emphasize this character's Jewishness or supposed New York origins, except possibly to distance him from Updike's own persona, or out of envy of the New York Jewish intelligentsia.That said, "Bech at Bay" was an enjoyable read. For me, the volume started slow, with another unnecessary tale of Bech's European travels, this time to Czechoslovakia, apparently intended mainly to remind us of Bech's Jewish consciousness. The book picked up interest with a story of Bech accepting an appointment to preside over the aging remnants of "The Forty" -- an honorary organization of writers, composers and other artists, a society that subsequently squabbles bitterly over past and contemporary artistic values and whether the society should continue or dissolve (and thereby whack up a juicy endowment among its members). This is followed by a tepid and unrealistic account of Bech being sued for libeling a Hollywood agent, and suffering remorse in the process for the fellow Jew who sued him. The penultimate chapter, "Bech Noir," is a bizarre but imaginative and amusing recounting of an aged Bech's finding ways to murder, at very long distance, all the critics who have wronged him in his long career, and is written in a "noir" style. The final chapter finds Bech at age 73 siring a child, winning the Nobel Prize, being found unworthy by his peers of that honor, grappling with what a writer in his position should say in his acceptance speech, and delivering the speech with his daughter Golda in his arms.Bech at Bay is probably a scootch less than four-star material, but only a scootch IMHO. For those who think about and love literature other than silly page-turners, value the literary life, and prize thoughts more than hunky vampires, it's a very good read. There's a lot to criticize, but through it all there are some very interesting thoughts about real literature and insights into the literary mind.

"Bech at Bay," Updike's third Bech book, contains five crisp short stories about the anxieties and desires of Henry Bech, the "moderately well-known Jewish American writer." Updike is as smart and witty here as ever.In the first story, Bech travels to Communist Czechoslovakia to escape his collapsed personal life and deliver a lecture on "American Optimism." Showered with extravagant praise from Czech writers who have suffered torture and imprisonment, he's overwhelmed by the superficiality of his own work and the tenuousness of his freedom.The other stories take a decidedly more comic direction. In "Bech Presides," Updike delivers a needling satire of his own generation of elder writers presiding over an overfunded, outdated honorary society that no one else wants to join. In "Bech Noir," Updike plays out the author's dark fantasy of striking back at book reviewers in a series of increasingly outlandish murders. "After 50 years of trying to rise above criticism, he liberated himself to take it personally." (You're just kidding, right, Mr. Updike? By the way, I love all your books.)Fans will find what they've come to expect from this author, a remarkable ability to satirize and sympathize with ruthless clarity. No other author can have so much fun pampering and skewering himself. It's delightful to see Bech back, again.

What do You think about Bech At Bay (1999)?

I suffered through this book solely to feel justified in writing a scathing review. why do creepy old writers give us characters that are creepy old writers who are incredible sexually successful in spite of age, looks, charm and paunch? Do they think we want to read about this? I found Bech to be my second lowest rated protagonist, barely squeezing by Leopold Bloom, the public masturbating flashing Loyalist in Dublin (which may something of my character because by the end Bech is a serial killer blackmailed into having an infant at 76 by a 26 year old). I really hated this book and it colored my feelings on Updike dramatically. This book sucked real hard.
—Owen

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