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Rabbit Redux
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Sara, Old School Classics
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Dec 29, 2023 11:20AM

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I'm finished with the 1st chapter which is page 100 in my copy. Some general non spoiler thoughts so far. First, I can't believe how racist Rabbit has become. It's very uncomfortable reading but there is still this train wreck quality that makes it hard to put down.
I still contain that Janice is just as bad as Harry. She's not as racist, that we know of, but in terms of what's happening in their relationship and how she is treating their son, she is pretty despicable.


Behind the Spoiler is for up to the end of Chapter 1 (approx pg 100 in my book) (view spoiler)


I have also now finished Part 1. Much like the original, I do not like Harry or Janice but it is like trying to look away from a car wreck. I like Janice less than Harry for some reason. She seems both unfeeling and totally self-centered. I feel mostly for Nelson.

I agree, Sara. Up to chapter 1 so far I like Janice less. Ignoring Nelson is cruel.

[spoilers removed]"
I'm about half way in part II (page 148) but looked at your spoiler anyway Sara. I was in grade school at the time this was published and didn't comprehend the gravity of the time until later from books, movies, stories from those who lived it etc... It's the same for me that I can't really like or dislike Harry. He's just lost with guilt about people dying in the war, his dead end job, sick mother and fractured marriage. He can't make sense of the world like many others of the time who all expressed it in different ways.
Jill is a convincing character and (view spoiler)
Part III: Skeeter
(view spoiler)
I just closed out this section and have not really had time to digest it yet, but my impulse was to get my initial impressions down. It left an unpleasant taste in my mouth. I'm anxious to know how others react. This is not an easy book to read, for numerous reasons.
(view spoiler)
I just closed out this section and have not really had time to digest it yet, but my impulse was to get my initial impressions down. It left an unpleasant taste in my mouth. I'm anxious to know how others react. This is not an easy book to read, for numerous reasons.

Okay, I will try here. I will say two things. One, I was very impressed with Updike’s physical description and characterization of Jill. She is described as being almost transparent, the color of clear heart cedar, which is very pale, blonde to white. Question: Is Updike saying she maybe not a completely formed personality? She is not a ghost, but maybe not fully a person? What does she represent in this novel? This is till unclear to me, but maybe will become clearer when I read on.
And then, the obvious connotations of “Rabbit” could be someone speeding away (as he did in the first novel), or sexually active (which he seems more interested in than actually doing). I have a lot of rabbits and bunnies who feast on the salad bar of my garden, so I have some experience watching them. When you think about the mannerisms of a rabbit, there is a certain amount of nervousness or alertness about the environment, a constant measuring of the surroundings, and being totally in tune with the movements of other potential threats or just changes. This is Rabbit, I think, who is almost constantly sniffing the tides —almost in a paranoid sense when on the bridge when Jill’s purse is returned to her.
Am I reading too much into these ideas?
I knew you were going to give me things to think about, Terry!
I noticed the pale, white, transparent descriptions, but I did not connect that with Jill being unformed, which is perfect. I kept thinking of her as being weak. She is trying to put herself forth as a rebel or one who stands for something, but mostly she is just pushed and pulled. She doesn't choose. She has sex when she doesn't want to and she tries to disappear while it is taking place. She embraces the "movement" but for the wrong reasons. She also only sees skin color. She cannot distinguish between Skeeter, who is a drug pusher and pimp, and Martin Luther King, who wants people to be judged by their character.
Again, your analysis of Rabbit is perfect. He is constantly alert for danger, and yet, like Peter Rabbit, he has got to get into the garden regardless of what the farmer might do to him.
I have never known anyone who was as untethered as he is. How hurt is he by Janice? She makes him feel like a failure, but does he really want her back in his life? He does a good job of seeming not to care about anyone at all, but then he can't leave Skeeter on the street or turn him in, he has to try to transport him to a safer place to let him go. His conscience is so strange to me, because he feels concern for Skeeter, but he fails to see what he is doing to Nelson and he accepts what happens to Jill without any real emotion at all. He loves his mother, but he is almost resigned to whatever happens to her and he behaves as if he will always have tomorrow to visit her, no hurry.
I noticed the pale, white, transparent descriptions, but I did not connect that with Jill being unformed, which is perfect. I kept thinking of her as being weak. She is trying to put herself forth as a rebel or one who stands for something, but mostly she is just pushed and pulled. She doesn't choose. She has sex when she doesn't want to and she tries to disappear while it is taking place. She embraces the "movement" but for the wrong reasons. She also only sees skin color. She cannot distinguish between Skeeter, who is a drug pusher and pimp, and Martin Luther King, who wants people to be judged by their character.
Again, your analysis of Rabbit is perfect. He is constantly alert for danger, and yet, like Peter Rabbit, he has got to get into the garden regardless of what the farmer might do to him.
I have never known anyone who was as untethered as he is. How hurt is he by Janice? She makes him feel like a failure, but does he really want her back in his life? He does a good job of seeming not to care about anyone at all, but then he can't leave Skeeter on the street or turn him in, he has to try to transport him to a safer place to let him go. His conscience is so strange to me, because he feels concern for Skeeter, but he fails to see what he is doing to Nelson and he accepts what happens to Jill without any real emotion at all. He loves his mother, but he is almost resigned to whatever happens to her and he behaves as if he will always have tomorrow to visit her, no hurry.

(view spoiler)


I agree completely, Sara. It's just mindlessly spouting off, like the swearing. We see later in the Skeeter chapter (view spoiler)

I am not sure what I really think about this! Parts of it were a massive slog for me and I admit to feeling total revulsion at the living situation, the drug use, the foul langua..."
I too was shocked by a lot that happened in this chapter, Sara. Harry switched places with Janice for me, being the much worse parent at that point but (view spoiler)

Okay, I will try here. I will say two things. One,..."
Excellent point about Jill's description and her not being fully formed, Terry. I think all the characters are not fully formed which I'll say more about in Sam's due to spoilers.

I also find Updike's way to put us in the room, exceptional, Sam. (view spoiler)
I thought this was brilliant and look forward to the next one, even though I'm sure it will be another train wreck.
Sue, you have expressed so well many of my thoughts while reading. It is precisely because everything seems intentional on Updike's part that it is bearable to read.
I really appreciated this comment regarding Harry: It's like he's living in a walking coma and can't control anything around him, like his mom in her nightmares. Exactly.
I really appreciated this comment regarding Harry: It's like he's living in a walking coma and can't control anything around him, like his mom in her nightmares. Exactly.

I really appreciated this com..."
Thanks, Sara. I just realized that I accidentally had 2 spoiler tags in a row that cancelled each other out. Luckily Terry didn't get here before I noticed.

I'm also thinking of reading the Rabbit at Rest this December or next January.

By the way, I am in Part 3 now. Has everyone else finished?

By the way, I am in Part 3 now. Has everyone else finished?"
I'm finished. Glad you are up for the next one, Terry!
Sue's suggestion of June would work for me. I need a little break between them but will absolutely finish the series. I might want to read Rabbit at Rest in September or November. December is generally a tough month for me and I do want to finish the series this year.
Terry--I am very curious to see what your final thoughts are on this one.
Terry--I am very curious to see what your final thoughts are on this one.

Great! with this, I'll make my minimum goal of 5 Pulitzers this year for sure!

One thought is that the lunar landing is a metaphor for Rabbit in this period of his life. He is floating in an unfamiliar world, having completely lost his bearings when his wife leaves him. The book is filled with words like “space,” “astronaut,” “moon rocks” and “moons.” Harry is on another planet, does not understand the current political environment, and seems to be passively floating in space, untethered, not even able to help his son — although he wants to. As the book progresses, he loses more and more.
I found the book to be sad and somewhat unsatisfying with perhaps just a glimmer of hope at the end.
Great pickup on the moon symbolism, Terry. Fits perfectly. I'm unsure if I have any hope for Rabbit or Janice, they seem so self-destructive to me. But...he is about to get "rich" and that might mean life and not money.

I don't expect their lives to get better even when Rabbit gets "Rich" as the next title implies. I guess it doesn't bother me because I see this series now like a great modern tragedy. An American tragedy.
