Author: John Updike
Publisher: Young-rim Cardinal
391 pages
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>>>This book is written in Korean. |
About This Book
A meditation on art, aging, and memory, John Updike's Seek My Face is
the fictional equivalent of a PBS documentary on postwar American art.
Seventy-nine-year-old Hope Chafetz, a painter of merit but, most
importantly, wife to two major American artists, allows a young
journalist named Kathryn to interview her for an online magazine. Having
expected perhaps a two-hour talk over coffee, Hope is dismayed to find
that her guest has brought sheaves of questions, a tape recorder, and
the kind of scrupulous attention to detail--even sexual detail--that
Hope would rather avoid. She gives an entire day to Kathryn, who, like
memory itself, seems oblivious to Hope's need to eat, rest, or breathe
fresh air.
Seek My Face draws on the story of Lee Miller and Jackson Pollock, the
model for Hope's first husband. These are the best parts of a slow,
sumptuous, and intricately detailed novel that lacks any significant
action except in retrospect. Hope's second husband is depicted as an
amalgam of Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, Claes Oldenburg, and Wayne
Thiebaud--a useful survey of the period, but not compelling
characterization. One can sense the author folding in important
art-historical points and details toward the end, like last-minute
ingredients in a cake that may be too heavy to rise. Readers who stay
with Hope and Kathryn through the day, however, will be rewarded with a
gorgeous, resonant, and almost antimodern ending. --Regina Marler
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