Have people stopped reading him? Or is it just that now that I've hit 40 I'm starting to sound like a doddering crank. Someone please shoot me before I utter the words "kids these days," but really, when a bunch of my undergrads, most of them well read, admitted that they hadn't read Cheever, it gave me pause. How can you not read Cheever? They should read the stories, certainly. And the Wapshot books. But my favorite Cheever of all are The Journals. They're sheer brilliance.
I had never read Cheever, I'll admit, until he was assigned in my workshop this past year. Almost none of us had, actually (and keep in mind this was graduate school). Of course, Cheever blew my mind, yet none of my non-writer friends had any intention of reading him, even on recommendation. I think it's safe to say that without MFA programs, Cheever (and in some ways short stories in general) might be forgotten altogether.
There is, by the way, a fantastic podcast of Richard Ford reading and discussing Cheever's classic "Reunion," on the New Yorker's Fiction podcast.
Posted by: ajg | November 12, 2007 at 02:21 PM
How sad that Cheever has been forgotten. The stories are amazing, and I dip into the journals from time to time.
Posted by: Reginald Harris | November 12, 2007 at 06:53 PM
I read Cheever (30ish female suburban lawyer)!!! Had the best Christmas ever last year - husband got food poisoning so rather than seeing his sister's husband's extended (and totally unknown to and by us) family way the hell out in the sticks for Xmas Day I got a quiet house, the big red book of stories and a bottle of wine. If all holidays could be full of Cheever and relative-free....
Posted by: MJ | November 13, 2007 at 11:33 AM