American Pastoral by Philip Roth

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(Paperback - Reprinted Edition)

  • Pub. Date: February 1998
  • 432pp
  • Sales Rank: 12,283
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    Reader Rating: (24 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Intellectually Stimulating" See All

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    • Overview
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: February 1998
    • Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
    • Format: Paperback, 432pp
    • Sales Rank: 12,283

    Synopsis

    Symbolic of turbulent times of the 1960s, the explosion of a bomb in his own bucolic backyard sweeps away the innocence of Swede Levov, along with everything industriously created by his family over three generations in America. Unabridged. 14 CDs.

    Annotation

    Symbolic of turbulent times of the 1960s, the explosion of a bomb in his own bucolic backyard sweeps away the innocence of Swede Levov, along with everything industriously created by his family over three generations in America. Unabridged. 14 CDs.

    Albert Mobilio

    Because in this, my one life, I can only spend so much time meditating upon Philip Roth's sexual hang-ups and identity issues, I've approached that ongoing self-obsession, which he regularly parses into novel-sized chunks, with wariness. Now along comes American Pastoral, a novel about three generations of family life and, in particular, the rupture between a father and daughter that embodies the social upheaval of the '60s. A big-picture book, it aspires to naturalist traditions that pit irresistible social forces against hapless souls. Clearly, this time around Roth wants to dodge the much-leveled charge of navel gazing.

    At least as much as he can. American Pastoral successfully shoulders its weighty public theme of American optimism undone by a propensity for the extreme. It also rounds up Roth's usual subjects -- Jewish assimilation, bourgeois pretension and the shiksa's fatal allure. His perennial alter ego, Nathan Zuckerman, can't help but make an appearance at his high school reunion. It was in high school during the 1940s that Zuckerman got to know Seymour Levov, a blond, supremely confidant athletic hero nicknamed "the Swede," upon whom the Jews of Newark heaped adoration. In his physical prowess and simple ease of being -- "no striving, no ambivalence, no doubleness" -- the Swede represented "a oneness with America" for these first- and second-generation immigrants.

    After learning of Seymour's death at the reunion, Zuckerman decides to write about him. The golden boy of Weequahic took over his father's profitable business, married an Irish Catholic former Miss New Jersey and moved to a posh 100-acre spread far from decaying Newark. It's the postwar American dream, until he slams smack up against another pure product of America: To protest the Vietnam War, the Swede's teenage daughter blows up a small-town post-office, accidentally killing a popular local doctor. She goes into hiding for 25 years, during which time the Swede is tortured, first by not knowing how she is, and then by knowing all too well the madness that has consumed her life.

    Roth's faithful, often piercing apprehension of the jagged emotional transactions between parent and child form this book's true achievement. (Perhaps, since it was revealed in Claire Bloom's recent memoir that Roth ordered her teenage daughter out of the house, the childless Roth wants to prove he knows from parenthood.) Sadly though, this is another novel by a marquee author that suffers from intimidated or inactive editors. There are long sections of conversation (one features the Swede's bulldog of a father interrogating his Catholic future daughter-in-law about anti-Semitism), that just go on and on. Structurally, the book is poorly shaped. Roth doesn't circle back to the 90-page preamble featuring Zuckerman, the ending feels arbitrary and the gratifying if bracing payoff that American Pastoral vigorously promises throughout is denied. But, if you want a Philip Roth book that isn't just another bulletin from his life, this one is that and more. -- Salon

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    Biography

    Award-winning author Philip Roth has made a career of confronting the heartbreaking dissolution of relationships, the absurdity of sexual neuroses, and the downside of his own literary fame. Many of his readers believe that Roth has been merely writing his own story for nearly fifty years. However, the author refuses to offer such speculators any simple answers, saying of his characters, “It's all me. Nothing is me."

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    Customer Reviews

    Very interesting narratorby Anonymous

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    October 17, 2009: This book managed to focus on the theme of the political and social upheaval of the late 1960's and early 1970's without coming across as cliche or a mere rehashing of things that have already been said.

    Roth is very fair to the characters. I think he portrays the nuances of the older generation quite well rather than relying on the stereotypes that are often used in films and books exploring this time period.

    I found the writing style very accessible and enjoyable. His characters were well developed and he kept my attention throughout the novel. His focus on the glove industry reminded me of Melville's focus on whaling in Moby Dick.

    American Pastoral provides a thorough view of the successes and painful undercurrents which ran it'sby JiminAk

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    June 07, 2009: The title of Dave Eggers "A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius" may have coined the phrase which may best describe this monumental novel. All of us have had a Swede Lenov (Roth's protagonist) touch our lives at some point. Swede is the American "everyman", whose successes are carried humbly through his life until he experiences a dismantling of which he was unprepared to ever comprehend. Roth expertly crafts this story using sketches of his secondary characters in a manner which delivers essential facts yet doesn't explore them any more than necessary.

    This book has joined my list of favorites, and ranked highly among them.

    I Also Recommend: Sometimes a Great Notion.


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