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Brief Biography and
Awards
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Philip Milton Roth was born in
Newark, New Jersey, in 1933, the son of
American-born parents and the grandson of European
Jews who were part of the nineteenth-century wave of
immigration to the United States. He grew up in the
city's lower-middle-class section of Weequahic and
was educated in Newark public schools. He later
attended Bucknell University, where he received his
B.A., and the University of Chicago, where he
completed his M. A. and taught English. Afterwards,
at both Iowa and Princeton, he taught creative
writing, and for many years he taught comparative
literature at the University of Pennsylvania. He
retired from teaching in 1992.
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His first book
was Goodbye, Columbus (1959), a novella and five stories that use
wit, irony, and humor to depict Jewish life in post-war America. The book won
him critical recognition, including the National Book Award for fiction, and
along with that, condemnation from some within the Jewish community for
depicting what they saw as the unflattering side of cotemporary Jewish American
experience. His first
full-length novel was Letting Go (1962), a Jamesian realistic work that
explores many of the societal and ethical issues of the 1950s. This was
followed in 1967 by When She Was Good, another novel in the realistic
mode that takes as its focus a rare narrative voice in Roth's fiction: a young
Midwestern female. |

Photo, by Naomi Savage,
on back jacket of When She Was Good, 1967 |
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Photo, by Ann Mudge, on
inside jacket of Portnoy's Complaint, 1969 |
He is perhaps best known--notoriously so, to
many--for his third novel, Portnoy's Complaint
(1969), a wildly comic representation of his
middle-class New York Jewish world in the portrait
of Alexander Portnoy, whose possessive mother makes
him so guilty and insecure that he can seek relief
only in elaborate masturbation and sex with
forbidden shiksas. For readers of that
hilarious novel, eating liver would never be the
same (read the book and you'll understand).
Portnoy's Complaint was not only the
New York Time's best seller for the year 1969, it
also made a celebrity out of Roth. . . an
uncomfortable position that he would later
fictionalize in such novels as Zuckerman Unbound
(1981) and Operation Shylock (1993).
Following the publication of Portnoy's Complaint,
Roth experimented with different comic modes, at
times outrageous, as illustrated in the works
Our Gang (1971), a parodic attack on Richard
Nixon; The Breast (1972), a Kafkaesque
rendering of sexual desire; The Great American
Novel (1973), a wild satire of both Frank
Norris's novelistic quest and the great American
pastime, baseball; and the short story "On the
Air." |
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In My Life As a Man (1974), Roth not only introduces his most developed
protagonist, Nathan Zuckerman, but for the first time his fiction becomes
highly self-reflexive and postmodern. One of his most significant literary
efforts is the Zuckerman trilogy: The Ghost Writer (1979), Zuckerman
Unbound, and The Anatomy Lesson (1983) and wrapped up with a novella
epilogue, "The Prague Orgy" (1985). These novels trace the development
of Roth's alter ego--or alter brain, as Roth has called him--Nathan Zuckerman, from an aspiring young writer to a
socially compromised, and psychologically besieged, literary celebrity. In
The Counterlife (1986), perhaps his most
ambitious and meticulously structured novel, Roth
brings a temporarily end to his Zuckerman writings.
It is also the first time that the author engages in
a sustained examination of the relationship between
American and Israeli Jews.
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Philip Roth with Milan
Kundera, 1980 |
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Photo, by Nancy Crampton,
on back jacket of Deception, 1990 |
His next four books--The Facts
(1988), Deception (1990), Patrimony
(1991), and Operation Shylock--explore the relationship between
the lived world and the written world, between "fact" and "fiction."
Through his protagonist in these works, also named Philip Roth, the author
questions the genres of autobiography and fiction, and he mischievously
encourages the reader to become caught up in this literary game. Of these
four books, only one, Deception, is billed as a novel. The other
three are subtitled as either an autobiography (The Facts), a memoir or
"true story" (Patrimony), or a confession (Operation Shylock).
The most elaborate of these, Operation Shylock, is arguably Roth's finest
work, leading fellow writer Cynthia Ozick to call it in one of her interviews,
"the Great American Jewish Novel" and Roth "the boldest American writer alive." |
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Roth's next novel, Sabbath's Theater (1995), is a return to the
outrageous psycho-sexual (and tragicomic) form that entertained and
outraged so many in Portnoy's Complaint. Its "hero," the
over-the-hill puppeteer Mickey Sabbath, is nothing if not a character portrait
of transgressive behavior. However in his next three novels, what is called his American Trilogy, Roth relies once again on Nathan Zuckerman as
his agent of focus. American Pastoral (1997), I Married a
Communist (1998), and The Human Stain (2000) can be read as novels
that reflect key moments in late twentieth-century American experience--in the
1960s, 1950s, and 1990s, respectively--and each is chronicled by an older
Zuckerman, no longer the mischievous and sexually-adventurous young writer he
once was. In this later trilogy, the aged writer has become somewhat of a
recluse who devotes himself exclusively to his writing, and through this writing
reveals the stories of memorable individuals who, in many ways, represent the
social, political, and psychological conflicts that define post-war America. |
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In
The Dying Animal (2001), Roth revisits the
life of David Kepesh, the protagonist of The
Breast and The Professor of Desire
(1977). As in the earlier novels, Kepesh is
concerned with the erotic side of existence and, as
he puts it, "emancipated manhood." Yet even
though its focus in explicitly sexual, this novel,
like almost all of Roth's other works, has as its
theme the ways in which individuals--specifically
men--live with desire in the larger sense of the
word. One of the hallmarks of Roth's fiction
is the ways in which sexual, communal, familial,
ethnic, artistic, and political freedoms play
themselves out on the field of contemporary
existence. |

Receiving honorary
doctorate from Harvard University, June 2003 |
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Publicity photo, by
Nancy Crampton, for The Plot Against America,
2004 |
The Plot Against America (2004)
takes Roth into fresh literary territory. It
is an alternative history whose premise is the 1940
election of Charles A. Lindbergh to the White
House. What, Roth asks, would America have been
like had the isolationist and anti-Semitic Lindbergh
defeated F.D.R., reached a cordial “understanding”
with Adolph Hitler, and kept the United States out of
the Second World War? Reminiscent of the four works
preceding it, the new novel appears to continue the
author’s exploration of American identities,
national as well as individual, within the contexts
of its history. Also, much like the American
trilogy preceding it, The Plot Against America
focuses on the ways in which history is constructed,
showing it to be in many ways a "fiction" much like
that we see revealed in the pages of a novel. |
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In
Everyman (2006), Roth revisits the short novel, or novella,
form that he has been exploring in such works as
The Breast, Deception, and The Dying
Animal. The thematic focus in this novel
isn't so much on death as it is on illness and the
role that it plays in our lives. The
protagonist is an anonymous "everyman" figure
(reminiscent of the medieval drama) who, from his
youngest days, feels the effects of the decaying
body and where it ultimately leads.
Roth
latest book, Exit Ghost (2007), is supposed
to be the last work in which the perennial Nathan
Zuckmerman will appear. Unlike his last
appearances in the American Trilogy, Nathan is not
so much a narrating conduit in Exit Ghost as
he is the central participant in its various events.
This is reminiscent of the earlier Zuckerman novels,
such as The Ghost Writer and The Anatomy
Lesson, where Nathan was the point of narrative
focus. Roth also revisits many of various
characters and themes from the earlier Zuckerman
works and once again paints a vivid--and at times,
frantic--portrait of the artist as an (old) man.
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In addition to his novels and short stories, Roth has also proven to be an
accomplished essayist. In collections such as Reading Myself and Others
(1975) and the more recent Shop Talk (2001), his focus is on the act of
writing, both his own and that of other authors. The lengthy interviews
that make up Shop Talk first appeared in such publications as the New
York Times Book Review, the New York Review of Books, the New
Yorker, and the London Review of Books. The pieces themselves
are a testament to Roth's unwavering and ongoing admiration of some of the most
significant writers in the last half of the twentieth century. Until 1989
he was the General Editor of the Penguin book series "Writers from the Other
Europe," which he inaugurated in 1974. The series helped to introduce
American audiences to, among others, Milan Kundera, Primo Levi, Aharon Appelfeld,
and Ivan Klima. |

Publicity photo by
Nancy Crampton, 2006 |
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Unlike many prolific novelists, whose productive qualities may tend to wane over time, Roth has
demonstrated a unique ability not only to sustain his literary output, but even
surpass the scope and talent inherent in his previous writings. His latter
fiction is arguable his best work, as demonstrated by the succession of awards
he received in the 1990s. He has lived in Rome, London, Chicago, and New York. He currently lives in Connecticut. His awards and honors include:
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Aga Khan Award, Paris
Review, 1958 |
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Houghton-Mifflin literary fellowship, 1959 |
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National Institute of Arts and Letters grant, 1959 |
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National Book Award for Fiction for
Goodbye, Columbus, 1960 |
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Daroff Award, Jewish Book Council of America for
Goodbye, Columbus, 1960 |
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Second prize in the O. Henry Prize Story Contest for "Defender of the Faith," 1960 |
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Guggenheim fellowship, 1960 |
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Ford Foundation
grant in playwriting, 1965 |
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Elected to
National Institute of Arts and Letters, 1970 |
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American Book Award nomination for
The Ghost Writer, 1980 |
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National Books Critics Circle nomination for
The Anatomy Lesson, 1983 |
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American Book Award nomination for
The Anatomy Lesson, 1984 |
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National Book Critics Circle Award for
The Counterlife, 1987 |
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National Arts Club Medal of Honor, 1991 |
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National Book Critics Circle Award for
Patrimony, 1992 |
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PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction for
Operation Shylock, 1993 |
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Time magazine's Best American Novel of the year for
Operation Shylock, 1994 |
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Jewish Cultural
Achievement Award in the Arts, 1993 |
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Karl Capek Prize (Czech Republic), 1994 |
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National Book Award for fiction,
Sabbath's Theater, 1995 |
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National Book
Critics Circle nomination for American Pastoral, 1997 |
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National Book Award
nomination for
American Pastoral, 1997 |
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Pulitzer Prize for fiction,
American Pastoral, 1997 |
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Ambassador Book Award, English-Speaking Union, for
I Married a Communist, 1998 |
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National Medal of
Arts, 1998 |
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PEN/Faulkner
Award for Fiction for The Human Stain, 2001 |
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Time magazine's
America's Best Novelist, 2001 |
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American
Academy of Arts and Letters' Gold Metal for Fiction, 2001 |
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Franz
Kafka Prize (Czech Republic), 2001 |
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France's
Medicis foreign book prize for The Human Stain, 2002 |
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National
Book Foundation Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American
Letters, 2002 |
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Sidewise Award for
Alternate History for The Plot Against America,
2005 |
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PEN/Nabokov Award, 2006 |
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PEN/Faulkner
Award for Fiction for Everyman, 2007 |
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PEN/Bellow Award, 2007 |
Copyright © 2003-2008 Philip Roth Society
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