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Harvard Square

An Illustrated History Since 1950

Harvard Square( )
Author: Lotman, Mo
Commentaries by: Updike, John
Rush, Tom
Weld, Bill
Palmer, Amanda
ISBN:978-1-58479-747-0
Publication Date:Sep 2009
Publisher:Stewart, Tabori & Chang
Book Format:Hardback
List Price:USD $50.00
Book Description:

What do Barack Obama, Samuel Beckett, Fidel Castro, Joan Baez, Conan O'Brien, Natalie Portman, and Dwight D. Eisenhower have in common? Their footsteps have all crossed paths in Harvard Square. This well-trod patch of Cambridge turf at the corner of the United States' most renowned university has long been a crossroads where poetry, retailing, politics, design, performance, and every other cultural endeavor intersect. From the square's tweedy aspect in the 1950s through its many...
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Book Details
Pages:240
Detailed Subjects: History / United States / State & Local / New England (Ct, Ma, Me, Nh, Ri, Vt)
Travel / United States / Northeast / New England (Ct, Ma, Me, Nh, Ri, Vt)
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):12.5 x 10 x 1 Inches
Book Weight:4 Pounds
Author Biography
Lotman, Mo (Author)
American novelist, poet, and critic John Updike was born in Reading, Pennsylvania on March 18, 1932. He received an A.B. degree from Harvard University, which he attended on a scholarship, in 1954. After graduation, he accepted a one-year fellowship to study painting at the Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Art in Oxford, England. After returning from England in 1955, he worked for two years on the staff of The New Yorker. This marked the beginning of a long relationship with the magazine, during which he has contributed numerous short stories, poems, and book reviews.

Although Updike's first published book was a collection of verse, The Carpentered Hen and Other Tame Creatures (1958), his renown as a writer is based on his fiction, beginning with The Poorhouse Fair (1959). During his lifetime, he wrote more than 50 books and primarily focused on middle-class America and their major concerns---marriage, divorce, religion, materialism, and sex. Among his best-known works are the Rabbit tetrology---Rabbit, Run (1960), Rabbit Redux (1971), Rabbit Is Rich (1981), and Rabbit at Rest (1988). Rabbit, Run introduces Harry "Rabbit" Angstrom as a 26-year-old salesman of dime-store gadgets trapped in an unhappy marriage in a dismal Pennsylvania town, looking back wistfully on his days as a high school basketball star. Rabbit Redux takes up the story 10 years later, and Rabbit's relationship with representative figures of the 1960s enables Updike to provide social commentary in a story marked by mellow wisdom and compassion in spite of some shocking jolts. In Rabbit Is Rich, Harry is comfortably middle-aged and complacent, and much of the book seems to satirize the country-club set and the swinging sexual/social life of Rabbit and his friends. Finally, in Rabbit at Rest, Harry arrives at the age where he must confront his mortality. Updike won the Pulitzer Prize for both Rabbit Is Rich and Rabbit at Rest.

Updike's other novels range widely in subject and locale, fro



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