Showing posts with label Cheever. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cheever. Show all posts

The Enormous Radio, by John Cheever

 

John Cheever at the Wikipedia

The Enormous Radio at the Wikipedia

Audiobook

Missoury Waltz, by Johnny Cash

The Courtship of the Yonghy-Bonghy-Bo

Whiffenpoof Song

Oranges and Lemons

Biography, by Begoña Devis

 

John Cheever was born in Quincy, Massachusetts, in 1912. His father was the owner of a shoe factory, which went bankrupt with the crash of 29, and the family fell into relative poverty. After this fact, the father left the family, and the young Cheever lived for a time in Boston with his brother. During that period he survived by publishing articles and stories in various media.

He was expelled from the academy for smoking, which ended his education and this was the core of his first short story, Expelled, which Malcom Cowley bought for the New Republican newspaper. From that moment, Cheever devoted himself entirely to writing short stories that progressively found space in several magazines and newspapers, and finally in the famous magazine The New Yorker, with which he maintained, until the end of these days, an intense relationship.

He was called the Chekhov of the suburbs, because many of his stories occurred in the middle class neighbourhoods that were born around New York during the recovery of the economy after the Second World War.

In 1957 he won The National Book Award for his first novel, and in 1971 he won the Pulitzer Prize for his compilation of stories. He wrote primarily about the decline of the American dream, alcoholism and homosexuality, and sometimes his characters had dubious moral.

A movie was made from his short story The Swimmer in 1957, played by Burt Lancaster. At the time it was unsuccessful, but now it is considered a cult film by cinephiles.

John Cheever died in New York in 1982 at the age of 70.


The story

Many of Cheever's stories, like this one, revolve around the people who live in large cities in the second half of the twentieth century, and the particular strains this imposes upon them. In The Enormous Radio, Jim Wescott decides to buy a new radio as a present for his wife, without knowing the dramatic effect it would have on her life or what it would reveal about the lives of the people living in the same block as them.


QUESTIONS

In the first paragraph there are a lot of mentions to numbers, averages and statistics. What effect do you think the author wants to give?

What is your opinion about statistics?

The first paragraph defines the class which Jim and Irene, and their neighbours, belong to. But on page 3 there are more details: Can you tell us which are these other details?

Describe the main characters:

           Jim Westcott

Irene Westcott

Describe the new radio (appearance and “personality”).

How does the new radio change Irene’s way of looking at people? Give some examples.

Why do you think Irene Westcott went on listening to the radio?

When Irene saw a group of Salvation Army people in the street, she said they were much nicer than a lot of people they knew. What do you think she meant by this? Why are they nicer?

What do we learn from the story about the way of life of middle-class Americans in the 4os?

What differences in personality do you notice between Jim and Irene Westcott?

What worries them most: to hear the other people or to be heard by the other people?

How do you think you would react if you bought a radio like the one in the story?

Think about what can happen when you give a present and the person who gets it doesn’t like it, or the present turns out badly (e.g., a gremlin).

Irene tells her husband to stop a man beating his wife. Would you interfere? What would you do?

Give some information about the different families/houses.

What differences and similarities can you see between this radio and the screens in the novel 1984?

Can you give some information about...

           Schubert

Chopin
Missouri Waltz
Yonghy-Bonghy-Bo
Whiffenpoof Song
Oranges and Lemons
Salvation Army
Mayo Clinic
Ode to Joy
Il Trovatore

Nassau


 

VOCABULARY

fitch, Andover, handyman, uncrated, fuse, vacuum cleaner, whir, give them hell, nursery, station, overshot, overdraft, draft, forthright, overdrawn, halting, briefing, slipcover, Christly


The Swimmer, by John Cheever


John Cheever at the Wikipedia
The Swimmer at the Wikipedia
Analysis, summary, characters, themes... click here
More analysis: click here
Another study guide (clear and to the point): click here
The Swimmer audiobook (from minute 3.31 on)
The Swimmer (film) at the Wikipedia

The Swimmer (trailer)



Presentation, by Begoña Devis

Biography

John Cheever was born in Quincy, Massachusetts, in 1912. His father was the owner of a shoe factory, which went bankrupt with the crash of 29, and the family fell into relative poverty. After this fact, the father left the family, and the young Cheever lived for a time in Boston with his brother. During that period he survived by publishing articles and stories in various media.
He was expelled from the academy for smoking, which ended his education and this was the core of his first short story, Expelled, which Malcom Cowley bought for the New Republican newspaper. From that moment, Cheever devoted himself entirely to writing short stories that progressively found space in several magazines and newspapers, and finally in the famous magazine The New Yorker, with which he maintained, until the end of these days, an intense relationship.
He was called the Chekhov of the suburbs, because many of his stories occurred in the middle class neighbourhoods that were born around New York during the recovery of the economy after the Second World War.
In 1957 he won The National Book Award for his first novel, and in 1971 he won the Pulitzer Prize for his compilation of stories. He wrote primarily about the decline of the American dream, alcoholism and homosexuality, and sometimes his characters had dubious moral.
A movie was made from his short story The Swimmer in 1957, played by Burt Lancaster. At the time it was unsuccessful, but now it is considered a cult film by cinephiles.
John Cheever died in New York in 1982 at the age of 70.

The Swimmer

The Swimmer is a short story by John Cheever about a relatively young and handsome man who decides to go back to his home, 8 miles from where he is at the moment, swimming. For this he plans a tour along the pools of his various friends and neighbours, a route that he will call “Lucinda River” in honour to his wife. This wild idea will take him on a personal journey with surreal overtones. As the journey progresses, the character’s disorientation, his temporary alterations and the doubtfulness of his feat are revealed. At first his neighbours are friendly and accommodating, but there comes a time when everything gets worse, being forced to cross a public swimming pool, later when a neighbour accuses him of being  an intruder and in the last pool he sees how an old lover looks at him with disdain, and she doesn’t even offer him a drink. When he finally gets home, we do not know if a day, a month or a year, later, he finds it closed and empty
In my opinion, it is a metaphorical journey, in which the protagonist wants to return home but cannot find the way to do so. Alcoholism is always present, and the sinking in it (and not in the pools) is what increasingly disorients him and prevents him from getting where he would like. A journey on a magnificent sunny day, in which an attractive young man is about to do something heroic, but instead he finishes as a defeated man who has lost his home, family and even his memories.
It is a dark and desperate story, but of great narrative force and with a dreamlike and surreal component that makes it especially attractive.


QUESTIONS

Characters:
Neddy Merrill
Mrs Graham
Enid Bunker
Grace Biswagner
Shirley Adams
Mr and Mrs Halloran
Helen and Eric Sachs
Places:
At Westerhazy’s
At Levys’s garden
At Lindleys’s
At Welchers’s
At the Recreation Center
At home
Can you point out the hints the narrator give us along the story about the decline and fall of the hero?
What social class do the characters belong to?
What do they drink?
What is the National Audubon Society?
Can you find parallels between this story and the Odyssey or a Pilgrimage?
What season is the story situated in?
What is a point of no return? And what is the point of no return in the story?
Greetings: he kisses women and shakes hands to men. What do you think of this kind of greetings, one for men and another for women?
Where do you prefer to swim: swimming pools, the sea, rivers, reservoirs?

 VOCABULARY

golf link, artesian well, cumulus cloud, dogleg, hurl, choppy, saddle, hoist, portage, bony, de Haviland trainer, spigot, cordite, put sb out to board, tool (v), bask, roughhouse, cerulean