Source of book: Borrowed from the library
Couples was my first experience of John Updike, who is generally considered one of the literary giants of the second half of the 20th Century. He is one of those authors that you vaguely feel you should read, but in my case had never gotten around to doing so.
Interestingly, he was one of only four authors to have won the Pulitzer for fiction twice. I have read the other three: William Faulkner, Booth Tarkington, and Colson Whitehead. Thornton Wilder actually won three Pulitzers, but two of those were for drama, not fiction.
I’m not entirely sure where to start with this post. Couples is a pretty long book and has a lot of detail in it. It is also a great snapshot of middle-class New England culture of the early 1960s.
It is mostly about sex - specifically adultery - but while it is explicit enough, it isn’t particularly titillating. In a lot of ways, I found the people in the book to be tedious and even unpleasant. Which is different from finding the book to be tedious. Updike is a really good writer, and although the book did feel like it dragged at times, his descriptions and characterizations tend to draw you in.
So perhaps I will start with this: I would consider being in this book as a character to be a peculiar form of hell. I would not like to hang out with these people. I would definitely not want to have sex with any of these people. I’d prefer to live a very different kind of life.
But don’t think that Updike approved of his characters either.
If anything, he makes a profoundly conservative argument: that the loss of a religious basis for sexual morality leads to a lack of meaning and direction to life. The hole that used to be filled with a certain culture and the religion it was connected to instead becomes filled with empty television, vapid dinner parties, and bored adultery.
I looked it up after reading the book, and apparently Updike did go through a crisis of faith, before eventually landing on a kind of undefined “Christianity” that certainly wasn’t Evangelical or fundamentalist, but was complicated and inconsistent.
On the one hand, I admire that his favorite Christian thinkers were Kirkegaard and Karl Barth - you could do a lot worse than that. He generally supported progressive politics, including strong support for diversity as an American value. On the other, like his characters, he was a serial adulterer throughout his life and left his first wife to be with one of his mistresses. His writing is also somewhat sexist, like most white males of his - or perhaps any - era. So, maybe someone you might like more at a distance than in person.
Couples is about exactly what the name implies: a bunch of couples. And the ways they screw around.
There are a total of ten couples, and they can be a bit difficult to keep track of. Some are more at the center of the story than others.
All live in the fictional Massachusetts town of Tarbox (perhaps patterned after Ipswich.) They range from lower middle class - a construction contractor and an airline pilot - to upper middle class - scientists, a dentist, bankers. This class distinction, particularly who has a degree and who doesn’t, is part of the drama in the book.
The age range is mostly in the mid-30s, with a few older and one couple - the new one - a bit younger. All have somehow entered that stage of life where boredom enters in, with or without kids.
Their homes have fancy books they haven’t read, records with music from 10 years ago that they can dance to, and they get together for dinner parties with lots of drinking, impromptu sports games, and the usual civic activities. It’s very bourgeois, and very of an era.
Honestly, I didn’t feel like I would have enjoyed these people, even though they are, more or less, my social class. I hang out with people, have dinner, enjoy adult beverages, etc., so I guess I am probably as boring as they are.
It really is the stultifying conversations, the games, the small talk, that isn’t my cup of tea, I guess.
And also, I really don’t find myself drawn to all the flirting and fucking. It seems like too much drama, too much intensity, too much risk-in-order-to-forget-the-ennui for my taste.
The sex ranges quite a bit - it’s not all “cheating” as we tend to think of it.
For example, we find out that the Saltz’s and Constantines have fallen into a foursome. And also that the women prefer each other to the men.
The Applebys and the “little” Smiths start off with an affair initiated by Marcia Smith, then a retaliatory affair between Janet Appleby and Harold. But by the end of the episode, it has turned more into a spouse swap with everyone knowing about it.
Then, there are some intentional affairs with consent, and plenty of old-fashioned sneaking.
Perhaps Leonard Cohen was thinking of this book with his song:
Everybody knows that you love me baby
Everybody knows that you really do
Everybody knows that you've been faithful
Oh, give or take a night or two
Everybody knows you've been discreet
But there were so many people you just had to meet
Without your clothes
Everybody knows
There isn’t the usual protagonist in this book, with a more omniscient point of view, and switching perspectives, but the central character is probably Piet Hanema, the builder. I think he may be a bit of a stand-in for Updike, and he, um…gets around.
The book starts with him fucking the dentist’s wife, Georgene. Until an accidental panty flash by “Foxy” Whitman, the pregnant wife of Ken, a probably autistic scientist. So they begin an affair while Piet remodels their new house. Oh, but later in the book, after he has tried to break up with Foxy, he has a fling with Bea Guerin. It gets complicated.
I find Piet to be annoying and tedious, mostly because I dislike horndogs and guys who are always trying to find themselves in women’s beds.
But Freddy, the dentist, is also one of the least likeable people in any book ever. He is acid, sexist, racist, cutting, amoral, offensive just for the effect. He also understands the others best, though, which makes him necessary to the story in addition to the requirements of the plot.
I probably don’t have to say that things go sidewise by the end of the book, for pretty much everyone.
There is no happy ending, although the ending isn’t exactly either a tragedy or a catastrophe. It just IS. The group of couples breaks up, as well as a few marriages, but there are other factors outside of the sex. Loss of jobs, geographical moves, a new set of “it” couples that take over the social scene. Life moves on.
I will also note that in addition to the religious question - which Updike raises but doesn’t answer - there is also the profound social change brought on by female-controlled contraceptives. The pill. Which certainly changed the calculation for sex outside of marriage, whether before or during.
I find it fascinating that, statistically speaking, the most promiscuous generation on record is the Baby Boomer generation, followed closely by the generation in this book: the Silent Generation. Those generations had first intercourse the earliest, had the most sexual partners, and the most teen pregnancies. Later generations have seen all of those decline. Each generation waits longer, has fewer partners, delays childbearing, and generally sleeps around less. So much for “the kids are all hooking up in ways we never did.” The opposite is true.
For this book, the first flush of the feeling that all sex is possible affects all the characters. Suddenly, the risk of pregnancy need not be taken. Religion no longer binds those who do not believe - and even those who do seem to feel less guilt with less social pressure. What should one do? Is everything permissible now?
Related, of course, is what a reasonable expectation is for a spouse. Prior to the sexual revolution, men could, naturally, sleep around as much as they liked, just not with other men’s wives. For wives, no such option was acceptable. So the real change here was the question of whether a man could rightfully complain if his wife fucked like he did.
It’s all mixed up, and there are lots of emotions. That said, Updike dwells much more on the physical, and on the sexual desires of his male characters. Although the women aren’t left out exactly - and their drives are the cause of many of the hookups. I would say that it is more a male-centric perspective rather than an erasure of the women and their humanity. I certainly have read far worse, even in 21st Century literature.
I’m not even going to try to link my favorite lines with the plot in this case. Rather, I think they stand alone as interesting.
Piet, ironically, is one of the more religious characters - he and Foxy - which is why their affair is perhaps more fraught. He lost his parents all too early to a car accident, and this has driven him back to religion.
Piet wondered what barred him from the ranks of those blessed who believed nothing. Courage, he supposed. His nerve had cracked when his parents died. To break with a faith requires a moment of courage, and courage is a kind of margin within us, and after his parents’ swift death Piet had no margin.
Roger’s description of Tarbox:
“There’s nothing romantic or eccentric about Tarbox. The Puritans tried to make it a port but they got silted in. Like everything in New England, it’s passe, only more so.”
The conversation between Harold and Janet regarding their spouses’ affair is pretty funny.
“Well it’s the others I’m trying to talk about, Marcia and Frank. You keep talking about you and me going to bed. They are going to bed. What are you going to do about it, Harold?”
“Bring me some evidence, and I’ll confront her with it.”
“What kind of evidence do you expect? Dirty pictures? A notarized diaphragm?”
Harold also has one of the most beautiful lines in the book, and one that I really find true of myself.
Harold believed that beauty was what happened between people, was in a sense the trace of what had happened, so he in truth found her, though minutely creased and puckered and sagging, more beautiful than the unused girl whose ruins she thought of herself as inhabiting.
If you know, you know.
Another line really gets to the heart of the question at the core of the book. How much of “morality” is an internal sense of right and wrong, and how much is just a fear of what other people think?
For much of what they took to be morality proved to be merely consciousness of the other couples watching them.
This is true in other contexts too. What Trump has done to destroy the “morality” of white Evangelicals is to remove this fear of what other people think. He has blessed the evil that already existed, but was kept in check by fear of reputation loss.
Related is what Piet asks Foxy after one of their trysts.
“Piet. What will the world do to us?”
“Is it God or the world you care about?”
“You think of them as different. I think of them as the same.”
So often, in older books, I run across something I thought of as “modern” but turns out to have been done before. For example, remember the running of celebrity names together? “Bennifer.” “Brangelina.”
Well, in this book, the quadrangle that is the Applebys and the Smiths become, in the parlance of the other couples, the “Applesmiths.” And the ménage à quatre between the Saltzes and Constantines becomes “the Saltines.” Yeah, terrible. But terrible long before I was born.
Another question that factors in to the different affairs is the question of younger marriage. Ken and Foxy marry for the wrong reasons, as Foxy well knows. She was on the rebound from a Jewish man her anti-semitic parents disapproved of, and Ken checked all the boxes. This is from a conversation Foxy has with her mother, after confessing her affair. (Mom is divorced, and also complicated…)
“You ask me about Ken. I think what’s wrong with him is that I didn’t choose him. You chose him. Daddy chose him. Radcliffe and Harvard chose him. All the world agreed he was right for me, and that’s why he’s not. Nobody knew me. Nobody cared. I was just something to be bundled up and got out of the way so you and Daddy could have your wonderful divorce.”
It’s more complicated than that, and Foxy knows what she said about her parents isn’t the whole truth. But it also isn’t an untruth.
For the final line, I have to give a spoiler. If you don’t want the spoiler, don’t read the next part.
After giving birth, Foxy accidentally gets pregnant by Piet. They decide to procure an (illegal - this is 1963) abortion, and know Freddy has connections. But Freddy, if he is going to risk being an accessory to a crime, wants payment. What he wants is a chance to sleep with Piet’s wife Angela as a revenge fuck for Piet having fucked Georgene.
This is where it gets a bit weird. Piet never explains why Angela should fuck Freddy, and she doesn’t demand the whole story. (Although she suspects.) But she also has something to add to the conversation. (Honestly, of all the women in the book. I think I’d take Angela.)
The conversation goes a weird direction. Piet hints that he is in some form of trouble. Angela initially thinks he wants a divorce, but he tells her that what he needs from her would only take a night.
“Sleep with Freddy Thorne,” she said.
“Why do you say that?”
“Isn’t it right?”
Finally he repeated, “Why do you say that?”
“Because he’s always told me he would get into bed with me some day. For years he’s been wanting to get a hold over you. Now does he have it?”
Piet answered, “Yes.”
“And is that what he wants?”
His silent nodding made the bed slightly shudder.
“Don’t be shocked,” Angela went on, in a voice soft as the dark, “he’s been working on it for years, and would tell me, and I imagined I should laugh. What I always thought strange, was that he never just asked me, on his own merits, but assumed it had to be worked by bullying you. I don’t love him, of course, but he can be appealing sometimes, and I’ve been unhappy enough with you so that it might have happened by itself, if he’d just been direct.”
It’s a really weird scene, but actually compelling and realistic. It is one of the glimpses we have into Angela, who feels she isn’t attractive to men - particularly to Piet at this point, but the others as well. Seeing her emotions, her dreams and desires, is fascinating, and she turns out to be someone very different from the boring housewife and mother the others think she is. As I said, she’s the woman in this book I would prefer.
Having read this book, I don’t know if I will be reading more Updike. It was good, but also of its time in a way. I suppose I should probably read at least one of the Rabbit books. The writing made the book a good read, but the subject matter didn’t particularly speak to me. Your mileage may vary.


