Award-winning author John Updike dies at 76
Last Updated: Tuesday, January 27, 2009 | 1:29 PM ET
CBC News
Related
Internal Links
John Updike received numerous iterary honours over his more than 50-year career, including two Pulitzer prizes. (Martha Updike/Alfred A. Knopf/Associated Press)Pulitzer Prize-winning author John Updike, who through his prolific career explored post-war suburban American life, has died after a battle with lung cancer. He was 76.
The writer died Tuesday morning at a hospice near his home in Beverly Farms, Mass., according to a statement released in the afternoon by his publisher, Alfred A. Knopf.
Although best known for novels like his famed Rabbit series — two of which won the Pulitzer Prize — Updike's oeuvre over his more than five-decade career spanned many types of writing, including short stories, poems, children's books, essays, memoirs and literary criticism.
The bestselling author was considered among the upper echelon of contemporary U.S. authors, especially for his chronicles of modern America that explored sex, religion, marital discord and everyday society as well as capturing a generation's response to watershed events like the Vietnam war and the civil rights and women's movements.
Born in 1932 and raised in Shillington, Pa., Updike suffered from health ailments such as asthma and psoriasis from childhood, during which he developed a love for reading.
Eventually enrolling in Harvard University, he became editor of the Harvard Lampoon and graduated with an English degree. Although he travelled to England to study graphic art, he returned to the U.S., where he served as a book reviewer and writer for The New Yorker.
Updike is best known for his Rabbit series of novels, which follow the life of former high school basketball star Harry (Rabbit) Angstrom. The series, which began in 1960 with Rabbit, Run, continued with the novels Rabbit Redux, Rabbit Is Rich, Rabbit At Rest and the novella Rabbit Remembered, which concluded the series in 2001.
Other notable titles include Couples, In the Beauty of Lilies, Too Far to Go, The Witches of Eastwick, The Coup, Roger's Version, The Centaur and his Henry Bech series. His latest book, The Widows of Eastwick, was released in 2008.
Aside from the pair of Pulitzers, Updike's literary honours ranged from National Book Awards to the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction to the Rea Award for the Short Story.
Amid all the accolades, however, Updike was also the recipient of Literary Review's Bad Sex in Fiction lifetime achievement award, which the British magazine announced just this past November.
Updike is survived by his second wife, Martha, four children and grandchildren. Funeral arrangements have not been announced.
With files from the Associated PressShare Tools
FILM REVIEW: Men in Black 3 by Eli Glasner May. 25, 2012 11:40 AM Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones are back in the action sequel Men in Black 3, a third instalment of a series now 15 years old. Though new addition Josh Brolin manages some amazing mimicry as a younger version of Jones, the story doesn't measure up to the weird and wonderful charms of the original, says film reviewer Eli Glasner.
Top News Headlines
- Quebec students to challenge Bill 78 in court
- A collective of student associations, unions and environmental groups is holding a news conference Friday morning to announce their plans to mount a legal challenge against Bill 78. more »
- Teens share bullying tales in confession booth
- Raw stories about bullying emerged when a video booth was set up inside a Quebec high school. more »
- Reclaiming the dead on Mt. Everest

- The difficulty, danger and expense of removing the bodies of climbers who died in Mount Everest's "death zone" mean most of the dead remain on the mountain as a stark reminder to other climbers of the risks. more »
- Foreign investment review threshold rising to $1 billion
- The federal government is raising to $1 billion the amount of foreign money that can go into a Canadian company before the investment is reviewed. more »
Latest Arts & Entertainment News Headlines
- Shakespeare's Winter's Tale gets African reboot
- A Nigerian theatre company is performing an African reboot of The Winter's Tale, one of the lesser known tragicomedies written by the Bard, in London as part of the London Cultural Olympiad. more »
- Elton John cancels Las Vegas concerts over illness
- Elton John is suffering from a serious respiratory infection and has cancelled three Las Vegas performances on doctors' orders. more »
- Double-lung recipient dances on Ellen show
- Organ donation advocate Hèlène Campbell of Ottawa made her second appearance on the Ellen DeGeneres Show, but her first since undergoing a double-lung transplant. more »
- Vancouver Bieber fans in disbelief over tour snub
- Justin Bieber announced yesterday morning the dates of his world tour in support his latest album Believe, but fans in Vancouver were disappointed to see that their city didn't make the list. more »
Q Blog
Toni Morrison on her two selves May. 25, 2012 11:38 AM Jian speaks with the celebrated African American author and academic about her two conflicting selves, and her new novel, Home.
CBC Books
Talking about war May. 25, 2012 11:35 AM The public conversation around war has always been complex and thorny. How does Canada's military approach differ from that of other countries? Are we a society of peacekeepers or warriors? These are some of the questions that Noah Richler explores in his new book What We Talk About When We Talk About War.
- Reclaiming the dead on Mt. Everest
- New mom among dead in Aylmer triple stabbing
- Workers' EI history to affect claim under new rules
- Employment Insurance review boards to be scrapped
- Conservatives move again to have robocalls suits tossed
- Teens share bullying tales in confession booth
- Gatineau police to question man in multiple homicides
- Quebec faces mounting pressure amid student crisis
- SpaceX capsule captured by Canadarm2


