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Updike's Memoirs Take Life Seriously

In the final two essays, a letter to his grandsons and a reflection on religion, Updike moves into the self-consciousness of his later life.

Forgive Me Not

But as a result, the essays lose the playfulness and verge on self-importance, not self-consciousness. In all the essays, Updike makes offhand remarks that show a strong sense of his own significance, and the essays pick up this tone.

The first four are--like Updike's physical flaws--easily forgiven. The self-consciousness often comes as a wryness, a repetition of amusing bits of personal history which balance the self-importance with a likeable self-deprecation.

These essays prompt the sort of indulgence one gives a child. They avoid heaviness. The older Updike, however, takes himself too seriously. Ironically, he childishly exaggerates the importance of events in his maturity more than in his youth.

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By linking the essays, Updike gives readers a full picture of his life. This format allows him to move from a recapitulation of important events to the less obvious, but often more relevant, influences on his personality.

For the most part the essays are enjoyable--an honest and profound look at America, at human success and failure and at growing up. They portray an era and are perhaps more meaningful than the slew of backward-looking books that vomit up recent social history.

But Updike's latest book takes what is important in his life and uses it to show what is important in any life.

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