Philip Roth has announced that Exit Ghost, his next Zuckerman novel, will be his last.
Mortality is also the theme of the 73-year-old Roth’s current novel, Everyman, which he has said was inspired in part by the death of his close friend, Nobel laureate Saul Bellow.
This Salon piece from 2002 looks at the Zuckerman series.
Over the past 21 years the 68-year-old novelist has published the most ambitious literary series of our time: the Nathan Zuckerman books. Taken together, these eight interlocking volumes -- a trilogy and epilogue ("Zuckerman Bound"), a stand-alone novel ("The Counterlife") and a second trilogy ( "American Pastoral," "I Married a Communist" and "The Human Stain") -- form an awe- if not envy-inspiring masterpiece. Who knew that authors could still write on such a Proustian scale? The Zuckerman oeuvre weighs in at 2,215 clothbound pages, not counting Nathan's letter to Roth in the author's autobiography ("The Facts").
"Who knew that authors could still write on such a Proustian scale?"
Anyone who reads in the supposedly limited categories of "genre" fiction knew that: Rowling, McCall Smith, LeGuin, and Mankell (just to name the first four that I thought of just now) have all written sets of novels longer than that (some of them still in progress).
Posted by: Andrew Shields | December 11, 2006 at 05:28 AM
I think Mark is right, but maybe he wouldn't agree why. Genre writing relies, by definition, on what's given, on a template into which they can pour ideas and stories. It need never end, and unfortunately it doesn't.
The Proustian scale refers to a genuine literary work which, by definition, re-invents the novel and its relation to the world rather than absenting itself in inebriated fantasies. Not sure if Roth is Proustian in that sense however.
Posted by: steve mitchelmore | December 12, 2006 at 10:34 AM
I should point out that "Proustian scale" are the Slate writer's words, not my own. That said, I don't disagree with Steve.
Posted by: TEV | December 12, 2006 at 11:49 AM