Book Description
Henry Bech, the moderately well known Jewish-American
writer who served as the hero of John Updike's previous Bech:
A Book (1970) and Bech Is Back (1982), has become older but
scarcely wiser. In these five new chapters from his life, he
is still at bay, pursued by the hounds of desire and anxiety,
of unbridled criticism and publicity in a literary world ever
more cheerfully crass. He fights intimations of annihilation
in still-Communist Czechoslovakia, while promiscuously
consorting with dissidents, apparatchiks, and Midwestern
Republicans. Next, he succumbs to the temptations of power by
accepting the presidency of a quaint and cosseted honorary
body patterned on the Académie Franaise. Then, the reader
finds him on trial in California and on a criminal rampage in
a gothic Gotham, abetted by a nubile sidekick called Robin.
Lastly, our septuagenarian veteran of the literary wars is
rewarded with a coveted medal, stunning him into a
well-deserved silence. It's not easy being Henry Bech in the
post-Gutenbergian world, but somebody has to do it, and he
brings to the task an indomitable mixture of grit and ennui.