John Updike Biography, Age, Weight, Height, Friend, Like, Affairs, Favourite, Birthdate & Other

John Updike Biography, Age, Weight, Height, Friend, Like, Affairs, Favourite, Birthdate & Other

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This Biography is about one of the best Poet John Updike including his Height, weight,Age & Other Detail…

Biography Of John Updike
Real Name John Updike
Profession Poets
Nick Name Rabbit
Nationality American
Religion Christianity
Personal life of John Updike
Born on 18 March 1932
Birthday 18th March
Died At Age 76
Sun Sign Pisces
Born in Reading, Pennsylvania, United States
Died on 27 January 2009
Place of death Danvers, Massachusetts, United States
Diseases & Disabilities Stammered / Stuttered
Family Background of John Updike
Father Wesley Russell Updike
Mother Linda
Spouses/Partners Mary Entwistle Pennington (m. 1953), Martha Ruggles Bernhard
Children Elizabeth, David (born 1957), Michael (born 1959) Miranda
Education Shillington High School Radcliffe College, The Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Art at the University of Oxford
Awards (two) National Book Critics Circle Award (two) Pulitzer Prize for Fiction

2004 – PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction

(two) National Book Awards 1989 – National Medal of Arts 2003 – National Humanities Medal Rea Award for the Short Story for outstanding achievement Helmerich Award St. Louis Literary Award American Academy of Arts and Letters Gold Medal for Fiction Ambassador Book Award for Fiction Medal of Distinguished Contribution to American Letters

Personal Fact of John Updike

Considered one of the greatest American writers of the twentieth century, John Updike was a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner author and was also the recipient of many prestigious literary awards. A prodigious and prolific writer, most of Updikes novels center on religion, sex and the American middle class. Talking about average American people, he once said, “I like middles. It is in middles that extremes clash, where ambiguity restlessly rules.” Many of his novels have been adapted for movies and television for their visual appeal and proximity to the lives of Americans.

Apart from a fair number of novels and short stories to his credit, he was also a regular contributor to The New Yorker. According to famous essayist and writer, Adam Gopnik, Updike was “the first American writer since Henry James to get himself fully expressed, the man who broke the curse of incompleteness that had haunted American writing. Updike’s prose style has always been the highlight of his novels for its “rich description and language,” making it almost inimitable. However, his novels are not his only major works. He was an equally good poet and short story writer. He has a composed huge number of poems, written a large number of short stories and essays and literary criticisms. To know more about this great personality, read the biography below.