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Rabbit Omnibus: Rabbit Run / Rabbit Redux / Rabbit Is Rich (Rabbit Angstrom #1-3) Paperback | Pages: 700 pages
Rating: 3.98 | 1094 Users | 75 Reviews

Identify Regarding Books Rabbit Omnibus: Rabbit Run / Rabbit Redux / Rabbit Is Rich (Rabbit Angstrom #1-3)

Title:Rabbit Omnibus: Rabbit Run / Rabbit Redux / Rabbit Is Rich (Rabbit Angstrom #1-3)
Author:John Updike
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Deluxe Edition
Pages:Pages: 700 pages
Published:November 19th 2001 by Penguin Books Ltd (first published January 1st 1981)
Categories:Fiction. Literature. Classics. American. Literary Fiction. Novels. Contemporary

Representaion During Books Rabbit Omnibus: Rabbit Run / Rabbit Redux / Rabbit Is Rich (Rabbit Angstrom #1-3)

A collection of the first three of Updike's Rabbit novels, this is an incredible depiction of American life in the latter half of the 20th century. Harry 'Rabbit' Angstrom is a very normal middle class man, not particularly likeable, heroic or awful, living in the small Pennsylvania suburb Mt Judge, set at the foot of Mt Judge mountain close to the large coal industry town of Brewer. He exhibits much of the same mix of good and bad actions as any of us, cowardice in the face of adversity, bigotry and closed mindedness and through these books we see him grow from early adulthood just coming down from stardom as local basketball hero through to middle aged car salesman. We see social mores, material culture, politics, music and gender roles change through the very personal lens of the extremely local. Updike's use of extended metaphor, his attention to period detail and the quality of his writing makes this a really rewarding long read. In the first book Rabbit Run, we are in the late 1950s, Rabbit has a young family, wife, son and small flat. Rabbit comes home to find his pregnant wife Janice drinking and watching television, and simply runs. He gets as far as Virginia before turning for home, but doesn't go back to his house. Instead he stays with local minister Eccles before taking up with Ruth, a semi-prostitute, leaving her just as he gets the news that Janice is giving birth to their daughter Becky. But he runs again and tragedy ensues. As the second book, Rabbit Redux, opens we have moved forward to 1969 and Rabbit is working with his father at the printing works. Janice leaves Rabbit for car salesman Charlie Stavros leaving him to care for their son Nelson. Rabbit takes in Jill, a young small town girl searching for herself, and politically motivated Skeeter. Between them they introduce Rabbit to counterculture, drugs and civil right. Tragedy strikes again leaving a schism between Rabbit and Nelson, and at the end of the book Janice returns. Rabbit is Rich opens in 1979, Rabbit is now head salesman at Janice's father's Toyota dealership, working with Charlie Stavros but still living in Janice's mother's house. Nelson is at college but returns without finishing his course, trailing with him first Melanie and then his pregnant girlfriend Theresa, usually known as Pru. Nelson wants what his father got, an opening at the dealership, and father and son come into innumerable conflicts caused simply by misunderstandings and personality clashes. Rabbit and Janice are still together and finally move into a house of their own as the book closes.

List Books Toward Rabbit Omnibus: Rabbit Run / Rabbit Redux / Rabbit Is Rich (Rabbit Angstrom #1-3)

Original Title: Rabbit Novels Vol. 1
ISBN: 014015809X (ISBN13: 9780140158090)
Edition Language: English
Series: Rabbit Angstrom #1-3

Rating Regarding Books Rabbit Omnibus: Rabbit Run / Rabbit Redux / Rabbit Is Rich (Rabbit Angstrom #1-3)
Ratings: 3.98 From 1094 Users | 75 Reviews

Write Up Regarding Books Rabbit Omnibus: Rabbit Run / Rabbit Redux / Rabbit Is Rich (Rabbit Angstrom #1-3)
I enjoyed both of the two books in this Volume so much that I finished them on a 4 day trip to South Carolina. Updike just knows how to bring things into such clear and exact focus. He describes. My favorites of the 'Rabbit' series are "Rabbit Run" and "Rabbit is Rich". He just keeps developing the characters, even though they never change themselves. And they all seem so tragically resigned to a course of action so frighteningly familiar to anyone from the suburbs. I think he captures each

I've just read the first Rabbit Run so far, I just want to record my thoughts for later comparison once I get through the others.[return][return]From the start I was somewhat put off by Updike's style. Every little moment seems to be dissected into a thousand peices, with each characters motives and actions a prism into their psyche. I became somewhat impatient and actually overwelmed as page upon page of these absoutely stunningly insightful paragraphs kept coming at me. I was struggling for

So far I have only read the first of the two novels contained in this book, and I'm afraid I'm not terribly inclined to read the rest. And I purchased the set, so I have another two-novel compendium to go as well.I hated the story for at least the first half, though it's difficult to pinpoint why. The writing is almost poetic, not just in its descriptions but in every line, so the going was certainly slow. I can't imagine how he wrote four of these books - either it took forever or he has an

This is my first and only Updike to date. While I think it was really well written, the story was a bit depressing for my taste. A testament to the author's skill, I went back and forth between liking Rabbit and hating him. He is such a selfish character, and while he doesn't intend to hurt those around him, in his naivete he manages to do just that to just about every other character in the book. This is just a personal take. I know Updike was trying to make a statement in having such an

I'm liking it so far, although the prose can be a little mind-bending. But imagery, creating a world, this is something that John Updike, I am learning, excels at. Quite a good read. It was a long haul, but you end up going through three decades and getting a feel for each one of them, though I wasn't alive for any of them. At a parallel to these decades (the first three decades of the Cold War - a case could be made that the relationship between Rabbit and other characters in this book relates

I read the whole Rabbit series (4 books). Not the most likable character, but for some reason, I had to know where this character's life went. Uncomfortable, especially for today's world. These books span 30 decades and feels a lot like the Mad Men Era. Worth the investment in my time, but I still feel unsure how I feel about this series.

Rabbit Angstrom is Updike's vision of everyman, an ordinary man, living an ordinary life with an ordinary family in an ordinary neighbourhood, making the mistakes we all make and not really learning from them. This book is made up of three novels which follow Rabbit's life, concentrating in turn on the years 1959, 1969 and 1979. Rabbit Run, the first book in the trilogy, is very well written but I found it boring and too focussed on the purely domestic. Rabbit Redux and Rabbit is Rich are both