John Cheever: beyond the martini-swilling ’50s dad you might always have pictured
John Updike, in his last-ever piece of book criticism, characterized Blake Bailey’s Cheever: A Life as a “heavy, dispiriting,” and dull read, both bloated and methodical, but I was riveted to every last depressing page. My review appears in Barnes & Noble Review. An excerpt: As conventions change and language shifts after an author’s death, his or her fiction tends . . .