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Anatomy Lessons

Roth picked out the pathologies of Jewishsness and American malehood

Anatomy Lessons
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For Outlook바카라s year-end special issue in 2014, 바카라100 Books That Can Change Your Life바카라, the jury got quite animated when it came to discussing Philip Roth. The sheer number of books he wrote, around 30, with so many fav­ourites, made it difficult to chose one, which was a pre-condition for the selection바카라only one book per aut­hor. Juror Mukul Kesavan was for The Plot Against America, a counter-factual novel where Charles Lindbergh is elected American President in 1940 instead of Franklin Roosevelt, and starts targeting the Jews. Nilanjana Roy was for the novella Goodbye, Columbus, which was made into a film later, about growing up as an American Jew in the 바카라50s.

But the Philip Roth book which finally made it to the list, not surprisingly, was Portnoy바카라s Complaint (1969). Mani Shankar Aiyar clinched it with, 바카라Of course, it so happens that Portnoy is just two years elder to me. So everything in Portnoy바카라s Complaint is actually Aiyar바카라s Complaint.바카라 And this book of uproarious, risque humour and sexual depravity which used to be the surreptitious read of every college student, especially boys of a certain vintage, made the list. The youngster Alexander Portnoy is obsessed with sex  and the book is a long monologue of his sometimes real, sometimes fantasised encounters with all the girls and women who cross him, which as The New York Times put it, 바카라surely set a record for most masturbation scenes per page바카라. It is somewhat reminiscent of the early films of another American Jewish legend, Woody Allen. The book was both a best-seller and a critical success, though it did have a few detractors too. Irving Howe wrote: 바카라The cruellest thing anyone can do with Portnoy바카라s Complaint is read it twice.바카라

Roth바카라s obsessions all through his writing were sex, Jews (yes, he does have the characteristic nose) and America, the order changing occasionally. After his prodigious outpouring in the 바카라70s and 바카라80s, with The Ghost Writer and The Anatomy Lesson in the Zuckerman series바카라Nathan Zuckerman is the narrator in nine of Roth바카라s books바카라and other novels like When She Was Good, My Life As A Man and The Great American Novel, he started to fade. There were many books in between, unremarkable by Roth바카라s standards, which got polite reviews and was bought by only ardent fans.

Then, in 2000, when Roth was into his late sixties, he came up with The Human Stain, where Roth바카라s alter ego, Nathan Zuckerman, narrates the tale of Coleman Silk, a professor who is concealing the fact that he is half Black, is forced out of his college on charges of racism for a casual remark and who later has a steamy affair with the illiterate maid who comes to clean his house. It was made into a film with Anthony Hopkins as Professor Silk and the unlikely choice of a ravishing Nicole Kidman as the dowdy Faunia Farley. The film was a stain on the book, a contemporary masterpiece.

Roth wrote a biting open letter to Wikipedia in the New Yorker about a statement he wanted corrected about the book바카라s entry in the online encyclopaedia. When Roth wrote to them about the mistake, Wikipedia shot back: 바카라I understand your point that the author is the greatest authority on their work, but we require secondary sources.바카라 It prompted Roth to launch into a long letter about how the novel came into being, and which makes for great reading.

A couple of years before The Human Stain, Roth had written the sweeping American Pastoral, about war and terrorism, which won him the Pulitzer Prize. This triumphant success too was made into a movie two years ago in 2016, but Roth바카라s rotten luck with film adaptations of his books continued and the movie bombed.

By now considered one of the greatest American novelists of the second half of the 20th century, Roth continued to come up with books year after year till almost the end. His last great book was perhaps Everyman, published in 2006. It is a slim book, but tough for the reader to confront the novelist바카라s  unsparingly harsh gaze on the grimy, disappointing ordinariness of life, morality and mortality. How can his work and life be described in a few words? Let me end with Roth바카라s famous quote, from his 1984 Paris Review interview with Hermione Lee: 바카라Making fake biography, false history, concocting a half-imaginary existence out of the actual drama of my life is my life. There has to be some pleasure in this job, and that바카라s it. To go around in disguise. To act a character. To pretend. The sly and cunning masquerade.바카라

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