I just finished Rabbit, Run about an hour ago. I read the first half of the book quite slowly, struggling at times to make myself keep going. I picked up the book this afternoon and read the last half of the book in one sitting. I was partly fueled by wanting to finish the book by the end of February, but at some point I found that I couldn't put it down. In the end, I really liked this book.
What I liked:
the characters Like John said, the supporting characters in this book were pretty boss. They were all so deeply flawed, but somehow very likable. I especially liked Ruth and Mr. Springer. All of the characters were incredibly well developed. The scene where Rabbit leaves Janice for the second time and she comes totally undone was so incredible I had to read it a few times.
At the beginning of the book I thought I was really going to like Rabbit, and I went back and forth pretty frequently throughout the book. I hated when he made Ruth give him a blow j, it was so insanely degrading I could hardly believe it. It was shocking the way he talked about Janice. Dude does not know how to treat women. There were parts, though, where he was so tender and kind. Two specific glimmers of him being a good human being were when he took off his shoes while walking through the park with Ruth, and when his daughter was born. He seemed way more confused than evil, and more than anything he seemed really human. I loved how flawed all of the characters were.
the prose (most of the time) Again I agree that sometimes his sentences and paragraphs were just too damn long. I would be reading a two page paragraph and be like, am I seriously still reading a bunch of run-ons about this random park? At spots I got bored with the wordiness. But overall I really liked how much detail Updike paid to everything. I liked scenes like the one where Eccles picks Rabbit up on the street and drives him back to Ruth's place. It was a simple thing, but Updike made it more significant with such thorough descriptions of the entire event from the scenery, right down to what the characters were thinking.
The structure was interesting, as there were no chapters, and very few places where there was even a tangible break. I felt like each section flowed so well into the next, that even though it was slow at times, the book as a whole was so easy for me to just keep on reading. The book started coming together for me when he went back to his wife when she had the baby. It almost seemed like a different book after that point. His character was changing, and the entire pace of the book just really picked up for me.
miscellaneous First off I was totally shocked when the baby drowned. I had been feeling so optimistic about Rabbit ever since he went back to his wife, and had suddenly become emotionally invested in the well-being of these people. Things seemed to be going so well. It seriously depressed me. I guess most of all I didn't dislike Rabbit because he left his wife, or because he didn't stay with Ruth. My thoughts on our friend Harry were really hit on the head when he is in the Springer's house and there is that line about "the good way versus the right way." It was such a different world back when this story took place. It wasn't wrong for women to drink when they were pregnant, and it was seriously wrong to leave your wife. Is it good to drink while you are pregs? No. But neither I would argue strongly is it good to stay in a marriage that isn't working. Of course there are much better ways to leave said relationship. I really love reading about this time period.
I'm glad he kept going in the end.
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i was also totally shocked when the baby drowned. i guess i thought the book was going to follow a nice, neat narrative arc where rabbit would realize the error of his ways and try to honor the commitments he made to his wife and kids, or at least try to bail out of them in a semi-respectable way. but nope, he just up and takes off again, his wife spirals out of control and accidentally drowns their baby, then he blames her for it out loud at the funeral.
ReplyDeletein retrospect, this is a pretty awesome way to end a book. props to updike for having the balls to not feel the need to tie up everything with a nice bow. it made me like the main character even less, but who says you need to like a main character?
i am totally finding myself wanting to read the rest of the rabbit books just to see if rabbit gets his someday, instead of cruising around in a fantasy world where everybody should like him and he doesn't need to do anything that he doesn't want to do.
i would hope that in future books ruth has her baby and somehow forces rabbit to interact with his own life in a realistic, responsible way. but then again, that is just the kind of lesson-teaching and uncreative storytelling that updike made a point to leave out in the first book, and is one of the reasons why i liked it. damn you updike!
I agree, total props to Updike for the ending of this book. I mean right when things started looking up he totally killed a baby. That's not something you ever see coming. I also thought it got less ramble-y towards the end.
ReplyDeleteI am also very interested in seeing what on earth happens to this guy. I didn't actually realize that there were multiple Rabbit books. Does that make me ig'nant? I can forgive him for not wanting to stay with his wife, for whatever reason, I can forgive him for running, but he has this entitlement to put everyone around him down. You sense that he realizes he is flawed, and every now and then he does something decent, but damn man.
The more I've let the book sink in, the more I actually really dislike Rabbit. I mean for all of the obvious reasons, but I was just clinging to the hope that he was a good guy. Everyone around him just gives him SO many chances that I was sure there had to be something about him that was good. I generally really want people to turn out to be good, it's hard to believe someone can just be so rotten. But this guy is rotten. I hate it when I root for someone and end up being wrong. I better keep reading this series.