I was initially less enamored with the focus on Jewish-Writer identity, and Zuckerman's obsession with sex
I liked all that writing life talk quite a bit. Now, having Roth reflect back on those libidinous years via Zuckerman is a little annoying for me, though this may also just be an effect of my age. This is a common issue in Roth books, though, and can get tiresome, though he can be quite self-deprecatingly funny about it at times, too.
So 1/3 of the way in the book I thought it hot iranian women was a merely good book, well-written, by one of our greatest living writers. And then it really took off, and the dialogue really begins to sing, as it can in the best of Roth's works! Zuckerman's writing gets him in conflict with his own family, which makes him initially resentful of his Newark family and his parents's harping on his responsibility to his Jewish heritage.
Then the identity of a (Jewish) woman who is a guest in the Lonoff home turns him around again, making him question anew issues of the responsibility of the writer to his writing, to life, family, and cultural identity. I'm not going to say anything specific about that woman, but it is a surprising and wonderful turn of events that elevates the novel to a new level. In the end I very much liked it. Yeah, I was seduced by Roth, and Zuckerman. A great start to the series and surely one of the best books of one of the best American authors.
It is hard to engage some of the more specific reasons WHY I loved this book -- without giving away some of the more the dramatic elements
How did this not win the Pulitzer? How has Roth not won a Nobel? This was one of the most brilliant works of art I've ever encountered. Far and away, the best book I've read all year.
Early on when I read him I loved his funny college-age lust stories in works such as Portnoy's Complaint and Goodbye Columbus and Other Stories
This is the type of book I always hope to encounter when I read fiction.