Famous author’s family pays tribute at his local public library

Published 10:00 am Saturday, April 17, 2021

BEVERLY, Mass. — As a two-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize for fiction, John Updike was a prominent figure in American literature.

As a longtime resident of this seaside city, he kept a lower profile.

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“He was very unassuming,” said Dorothea Lam, the head librarian of the Beverly Farms Library. “Whenever he came in here, he sort of melted in the background.”

Updike’s low-key connection to Beverly got a bit of a boost on Tuesday when the late author’s son Michael stopped by the Beverly Farms Library to donate several items that belonged to his famous father.

The items included Updike’s 2006 Nashville Public Library Literacy Award, a framed Updike quote, three personal letters, a postcard and a business card that Updike made when he graduated from high school.

Michael Updike, a sculptor who lives up the coast in Newbury, Massachusetts, said the idea for the donations came about last year when he and his wife, Olga Karasik-Updike, visited the Farms library.

John Updike’s name is featured on the building’s facade, alongside those of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, who had a summer home in Beverly, and poet Lucy Larcom, who was born in Beverly.

During the visit then-librarian Martha Morgan mentioned to him that people would sometimes come there looking for Updike-related items. The library has about two dozen Updike books, many of them signed by the author. Otherwise there was nothing to highlight the fact that Updike lived the last three decades of his life a half-mile away, on Hale Street.

Michael Updike said he and his siblings — sisters Elizabeth Cobblah and Miranda Updike, and brother David Updike — picked out the items to donate.

“My father strongly believed in local libraries and research,” he said. “He did not use the internet for research.”

John Updike moved to Beverly in 1982 and lived at 675 Hale St. with his second wife, Martha. According to Adam Begley’s biography, he wrote 13 novels, 100 stories, more than 250 poems and about 300 reviews in the 27 years he lived in the city.

He died in 2009 at the age of 76.

Michael Updike said his father lived “sort of in isolation” in Beverly — his house was on a private road — and did not “rub shoulders with the locals” as much as he did when he lived a few towns over, in Ipswich, in his earlier years. It was in Ipswich that Updike wrote “Rabbit, Run,” the first of the series of novels for which he was most well known.

But he did like to visit the library in this area of the city, known as the Farms, and a nearby book shop.

“He really liked Beverly Farms,” Michael said.

The letters donated to the library give a glimpse of the personal side of Updike. In a typewritten 2001 letter to Michael and his family, he thanks them for a recent Christmas visit.

“(I)t gladdened our heart to see the two boys, so handsome in their different styles, growing in grace and wit. I hope they have learned to play with their presents; the Pokemon Monopoly might have to wait a year or two.” Updike signed it, “Dad/ John/Grandpa.”

In another letter, from 1968, he wrote to friends in Ipswich from London, where he was living at the time.

“We spend our days dodging rainclouds, taking erroneous buses, walking till our ankles swell up like adders, and learning to understand our house and our neighborhood,” he wrote.

Michael Updike said John started writing letters at age 8, when he wrote to his father, who was having a hernia operation, until 10 days before he died. And he saved most of them.

A volume of Updike’s letters is scheduled to be published next year, Michael Updike said.