"Rabbit Run" redirects here.
"Rabbit Run" is also the name of an
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Rabbit, Run is a 1960 novel by John Updike.
It depicts three months in the life of a 26-year-old former high school basketball player named Harry 'Rabbit' Angstrom, and his attempts to escape the constraints of his life. It spawned several
sequels, including Rabbit Redux, Rabbit Is
Rich and Rabbit At Rest, as well as a related 2001 novella, Rabbit Remembered.
Plot introduction
Harry "Rabbit" Angstrom, a hemmed-in 26-year-old, leaves his pregnant wife Janice on the spur of the moment.
Plot summary
Harry "Rabbit" Angstrom is 26, has a job selling kitchen gadgets, and is married to Janice, his former high school girlfriend.
They have a two-year-old son named Nelson, and live in Mount Judge, a suburb of Brewer,
Pennsylvania. He believes that his marriage is a failure and that something is missing from his life. Having been a
basketball star in high school, Harry finds middle-class family life unsatisfying. On the spur of the moment, he decides to drive
south in an attempt to escape. He soon returns home, however, where he visits his old basketball coach, Marty Tothero.
Tothero introduces Rabbit to Ruth Leonard, who is a part-time prostitute, and they begin a three month affair. During this
time, Janice moves back into her parents' house. Rabbit, jealous of a past fling between Ruth and a local man, forces Ruth into
submitting to fellatio (presented here as a degrading sex act), and on the same night
Janice goes into labor. Rabbit leaves Ruth and rushes to the hospital.
Janice gives birth to a baby girl, whom she and Rabbit name Rebecca June. Rabbit returns to live with his wife, and accepts a
job at his father-in-law's car dealership. Rabbit attends church one morning, and fueled by the flirtatious overtones of the
minister's wife, he tries to get his wife to have sex with him. When she refuses, and makes a comment about the "whore" that
Rabbit lived with for 3 months, Rabbit runs out. The next morning Janice, while drunk and afraid that Rabbit has left for good,
accidentally drowns their infant daughter in the bath. When Rabbit returns for the funeral, he refuses to take the blame for the
baby's death, ultimately running away once more. He returns to Ruth and finds her pregnant. She puts forward an ultimatum: file
for divorce or she will get an abortion. Unable to make a decision, Rabbit runs away once more,
leaving the novel's ending in midair.
Characters in "Rabbit, Run"
- Harry Angstrom, a.k.a. Rabbit, a 26-year-old married man.
- Miriam Angstrom, Rabbit's 19-year-old sister whom he likes a lot
- Mr Angstrom, Rabbit's father
- Mrs Angstrom, Rabbit's mother
- Janice Angstrom, Rabbit's wife.
- Nelson Angstrom, Harry's and Janice's 3-year-old son
- Rebecca June Angstrom, Harry's and Janice's infant daughter
- Mr Springer, Janice's father
- Mrs Springer, Janice's mother
- Jack Eccles, a young Episcopalian minister who tries to mend Harry's and Janice's broken marriage
- Lucy Eccles, Jack Eccles's wife
- Fritz Kruppenbach, a pompous Lutheran minister
- Ruth Leonard, Rabbit's mistress with whom he lives for a while
- Margaret Kosko, a friend of Ruth's
- Mrs Smith, a widow whose garden Rabbit looks after while away from his wife
- Marty Tothero, Rabbit's former basketball coach
- Ronnie Harrison, Rabbit's former basketball nemesis
References to other works
Literary significance
The novel is credited to be one of the first novels to use the present tense in its narration. Updike stated that "in
Rabbit, Run, I liked writing in the present tense. You can move between minds, between thoughts and objects and events
with a curious ease not available to the past tense. I don't know if it is clear to the reader as it is to the person writing,
but there are kinds of poetry, kinds of music you can strike off in the present tense."[4]
Film adaptation
In 1970, the novel was made into a film directed by Jack Smight. The script was co-written by Updike and Howard B. Kreitsek.[5][6] The poster reads, "3 months ago Rabbit Angstrom ran out to buy
his wife cigarettes. He hasn't come home yet."[7]
Trivia
The text of the novel went through several rewrites. Knopf originally required Updike to cut some "sexually explicit
passages," but he restored and rewrote the book for the 1963 Penguin edition and again for the 1995 Everyman's omnibus
edition.[8]
References
- ^ Interview with
John Updike at Penguin Classics
- ^ Interview with
John Updike at Penguin Classics
- ^ You Cannot Really Flee: By David Boroff New York Times article, Nov 6, 1960 pg. BR4
- ^ "The Art of Fiction", John Updike
- ^ IMDB page for the film adaptation
- ^ New York Times Movies entry for the film adaptation
- ^ The Internet Movie Poster Awards: Rabbit, Run
- ^ John Updike, "Introduction" to Updike, Rabbit Angstrom: A
Tetralogy (New York: Knopf, 1995), p. ix.
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