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American Pastoral: The renowned Pulitzer Prize-Winning novel Kindle Edition


WINNER OF THE PULITZER PRIZE

Philip Roth’s masterpiece provides a piercing look into the promises of prosperity, civic order and domesticity in twentieth century America


‘Swede’ Levov is living the American dream. He glides through life cocooned by his devoted family, his demanding yet highly rewarding (and lucrative) business, his sporting prowess, his good looks. He is the embodiment of thriving, post-war America, land of liberty and hope. Until the sunny day in 1968, when the Swede’s bountiful American luck deserts him.

The tragedy springs from devastatingly close to home. His adored daughter, Merry, has become a stranger to him, a fanatical teenager capable of an outlandishly savage act of political terrorism that plunges the Levov family into the political mayhem of sixties America, and drags them into the underbelly of a seemingly ascendant society. Rendered powerless by the shocking turn of events, the Swede can only watch as his pastoral idyll is methodically torn apart.

Extraordinarily nuanced and poignant,
American Pastoral is the first in an eloquent trilogy of post-war American novels and cemented Roth’s reputation as one of the greatest American novelists of the twentieth century.

‘Full of insight, full of sharp ironic twists, full of wisdom about American idealism, and full of terrific fun... A profound and personal meditation on the changes in the American psyche over the last fifty years’ Financial Times

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Philip Roth's 22nd book takes a life-long view of the American experience in this thoughtful investigation of the century's most divisive and explosive of decades, the '60s. Returning again to the voice of his literary alter ego Nathan Zuckerman, Roth is at the top of his form. His prose is carefully controlled yet always fresh and intellectually subtle as he reconstructs the halcyon days, circa World War II, of Seymour "the Swede" Levov, a high school sports hero and all-around Great Guy who wants nothing more than to live in tranquillity. But as the Swede grows older and America crazier, history sweeps his family inexorably into its grip: His own daughter, Merry, commits an unpardonable act of "protest" against the Vietnam war that ultimately severs the Swede from any hope of happiness, family, or spiritual coherence.

From Library Journal

In his latest novel, Roth shows his age. Not that his writing is any less vigorous and supple. But in this autumnal tome, he is definitely in a reflective mood, looking backward. As the book opens, Roth's alter ego, Nathan Zuckerman, recalls an innocent time when golden boy Seymour "the Swede" Levov was the pride of his Jewish neighborhood. Then, in precise, painful, perfectly rendered detail, he shows how the Swede's life did not turn out as gloriously as expected?how it was, in fact, devastated by a child's violent act. When Merry Levov blew up her quaint little town's post office to protest the Viet Nam war, she didn't just kill passing physician Fred Conlon, she shattered the ties that bound her to her worshipful father. Merry disappears, then eventually reappears as a stick-thin Jain living in sacred povery in Newark, having killed three more people for the cause. Roth doesn't tell the whole story blow by blow but gives us the essentials in luminous, overlapping bits. In the end, the book positively resonates with the anguish of a father who has utterly lost his daughter. Highly recommended.
-?Barbara Hoffert, "Library Journal"
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B004GKMUTO
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Vintage Digital; Film Tie-In edition (December 23, 2010)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ December 23, 2010
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 3603 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 450 pages
  • Customer Reviews:

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Philip Roth
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PHILIP ROTH won the Pulitzer Prize for American Pastoral in 1997. In 1998 he received the National Medal of Arts at the White House and in 2002 the highest award of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the Gold Medal in Fiction. He twice won the National Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award. He won the PEN/Faulkner Award three times. In 2005 The Plot Against America received the Society of American Historians’ Prize for “the outstanding historical novel on an American theme for 2003–2004.” Roth received PEN’s two most prestigious awards: in 2006 the PEN/Nabokov Award and in 2007 the PEN/Bellow Award for achievement in American fiction. In 2011 he received the National Humanities Medal at the White House, and was later named the fourth recipient of the Man Booker International Prize. He died in 2018.

Customer reviews

4.2 out of 5 stars
4.2 out of 5
4,804 global ratings
Past is Prologue: The sad sixties revisited
5 Stars
Past is Prologue: The sad sixties revisited
I read the book and watched the movie. Both were exceptionally well done. American Pastoral is part of a trilogy by Philip Roth, in addition to American Pastoral, there is The Human Stain and I Married a Communist. Each book deals with the subject of the purity of an idea. The Human Stain deals with the phenomenon of political correctness taken to the nth degree, while I Married a Communist, is set in the fifties, in the bad old days of McCarthyism. And American Pastoral deals with the excesses of student radicals of the sixties. I will focus on American Pastoral. Set in Newark in the sixties and early seventies, American Pastoral contrasts the lives and ideals of Swede Levov, an honest businessman and glove manufacturer who pays his employees (most of whom were black) well and treats them with respect. Swede is married to Dawn, a former beauty queen, Miss Atlantic City, which doesn’t sit well with Merry, Swede’s beloved daughter. Merry has become a radical, through and through, and questions the lifestyle of her parents, judging them as superficial. Too many children came under the sway of student radicals and agitators. During the 1970s extremist groups like The Weather Underground and The Symbionese Liberation Army set off hundreds of bombs every year (Time) In Roth’s book, Merry is responsible for bombing a U.S. Post Office, which results in the death of an innocent man, and results in her running for cover in the smarmy world of the radical underground.After reading this and watching the film, I thought about all those misguided youth of my generation, I’m ashamed to say, who supported the North Vietnamese Army (the NVA) and elevated Ho Chi Minh to hero status. Meanwhile, one of the more interesting ways “Uncle Ho” dealt with his enemy was by burying them alive. In the 1940s, following WWII, communists infiltrated the left. They bought into Stalin’s bullshit, not realizing that he murdered twenty million people in “show trials” (read Arthur Koestler’s Darkness at Noon). The children of the nineteen-forty lefties were called “Red Diaper Babies.” Some of them grew up to become foot soldiers for the Weather Underground and other such groups. Interestingly, a murdering communist thug duped these Red Diaper Babies, just as their parents were in the previous generation.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on May 1, 2014
I'm an American-German dual national about to return to my native Germany after 21 years in the United States. During my last couple of months in the U.S., I wanted to read a novel that somehow captured the essence of America and was truly "about" America. So, naturally, the Pulitzer Prize-winning Roth novel called "American Pastoral" came to mind. And I was not disappointed--this novel felt incredibly authentic, and it expressed with poetic intensity and narrative drama something very real and palpable about what this nation is and what became of it between 1945 and 1975 (endpoint of the main narrative) and 1997 (narrative present from which the main narrative is told).

What made the novel particularly moving for me was the rich realism: so many details resonated with me. E.g., one of the forlorn streets of 1970s Newark, where two lonely London plane-trees have survived from the days when these typical old-fashioned shade trees were cared for and treasured , when they sheltered pedestrians from the sun in an age when people would still walk the streets of their town. This image of the lone surviving plane-trees captures the death of pedestrian culture as well as the death of the kind of caring, stewardship, and craftsmanship that once pervaded every aspect of American life. I was reminded of the streets of Saint Louis, Missouri, where the sight of a few towering old plane-trees on an otherwise blighted block would sometimes speak to me eloquently of a beauty that has been lost.

Or there's the high school athletics and the culture of school pride and the dime novels about baseball heroes, the chicken cacciatore, the Polish, Italian, Irish, and Jewish immigrant families with their different traditions and cuisines, the Old World Catholicism gradually watering down from one generation to the next, the sterility of a faux-rural atmosphere in an exurban area increasingly dominated by all-American car and television culture, a "countryside" where the old genuine folkways are lost forever, the culture of beauty pageants, the obsessive consumption of news, the noise and din and workings of a traditional factory in pre-Rust Belt America, the devastating pressures of globalization, and more. All of it deeply familiar to me, from the tales my American grandparents would tell me about their own factory days, or even from my own experience, and from my wanderings through the old declining cities of the Midwest, whcih I so love (and which, in some ways, have a lot in common with the declining New Jersey towns depicted in this novel).

I was hoping this novel would not wallow in cliches about the supposedly brainlessly conformist 1940s and '50s, and it didn't--the era is not represented as particularly repressed, and its optimism, cultural coherence and relative "innocence" are explored with complex subtlety and with an awareness that the seismic shifts of change were already under way even then. The novel is a frank, honest, sincere, unsentimental elegy for the loss of American hopes and dreams, for an emerging American culture that disintegrated before it fully came into its own, and for all of those formerly proud industrial cities and formerly quaint rural towns that lost their souls and character in the course of the 20th century.

The language is poetic and ravishing and carries you along with its vibrant rhythm, sweep and intensity. It is less lavish than, e.g. the poetic langauge of Updike, but that is not a defect--in fact, Roth feels more grounded, more precise, in some ways. And he never appears to ramble--despite its length of over 400 pages, the novel feels tightly and purposefully constructed, unlike the self-indulgently rambling Updike novel "Rabbit is Rich," for example.

The 1960s are seen very critically--and, quite frankly, it is refreshing to see the revolutionary spirit of the era not being idealized. And yet, the novel does not come across as reactionary--in some ways, the novel does not let the preceding era off the hook for causing the explosiveness of the 1960s...

Incredible novel! One of the truly memorable ones of the late 20th century, I would say. If time chooses wisely, this novel will be among the surviving texts we still read in 150 years...
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Reviewed in the United States on October 28, 2020
Considered by many to be Roth’s masterpiece, American Pastoral tells the tragic tale of Swede Levov, a golden boy growing up in postwar Newark whose life is tipped upside down by the turmoil of the 1960s. The story is told by Roth’s alter ego, Nathan Zuckerman, who grew up worshipping the Swede when they were boys in Newark. At his forty-fifth high school reunion, Zuckerman discovers that in 1968, Swede’s daughter Merry was suspected of blowing up the general store in their small town as a protest against the Vietnam War. A revered local doctor was killed in the blast.

In the second section of the book, Zuckerman disappears as the narrator and we’re in Swede’s consciousness as he tries to regain his footing after Merry’s crime, calling on the discipline and decency that made him an athletic hero in his youth. He’s tormented by a young woman, Rita Cohen, who claims to be an emissary from his daughter. Five years pass. The glove factory Swede took over from his father is struggling, and his beloved city of Newark is falling apart from riots and decay. Then he gets a call about Merry. The last part of this section is the most powerful and affecting of the book.

Part three is a long dinner party at Swede’s house. It’s 1973, and the Watergate hearings to impeach Richard Nixon are playing out on TV. Swede is struggling to keep some sense of himself while realizing he can’t protect that self from the cultural collapse that surrounds him and America. At the book’s end, Swede is struggling Job-like to assimilate the myriad afflictions that have befallen him and the world he thought he understood.

What’s great about this book is its contrast between the post WW II America Swede grew up in, and the cultural turmoil he encounters and is completely unprepared for in the late sixties. There is beautiful, hyper-focused writing on Newark’s rise and decay, the bucolic promise of small New Jersey town Swede moves to, the stresses of running a manufacturing business in America when the cheaper labor lives elsewhere. Swede’s attempt to hold on to his daughter after her horrifying act is part of his attempt to hold on to a way of being in the world that increasing doesn’t work. Swede’s personal tragedy embodies the larger tragedy of a culture at war with itself and fracturing in the process.

A few quibbles. Rita Cohen, who may or may not represent his daughter, is more a caricature than a character, and never feels quite real. She couldn’t possibly know what she knows without being connected to Merry, so why be coy about it? The third section, the dinner party, is too long, and the focus shifts over to Swede’s wife and father, which slows the novel’s momentum. The repetition that several Amazon reviewers complained about is most pronounced in this part.

America was conceived in high ideals by compromised men who couldn’t possibly live up to those ideals. American Pastoral may be the best fictional account ever written about this fundamental American tragedy.
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Top reviews from other countries

Cliente Amazon
5.0 out of 5 stars IL CAPOLAVORO DI ROTH
Reviewed in Italy on July 26, 2022
BELLO ANCHE IN INGLESE
Ono.Matopoeia
5.0 out of 5 stars A Masterpiece
Reviewed in Canada on September 16, 2020
My comments cover all of the three books in the trilogy: American Pastoral, I Married a Communist, and The Human Stain.

Roth captured my attention throughout the three books and was certainly skilled at bringing out the psyche of the main characters.

In particular, two events stood out and were completely "gripping".
The adult daughter of the main characters in American Pastoral had devolved into a menacing and destructive individual who had shut off all contact with her parents. This state of affairs had carried on for a number of years during which the parents continued to search for her.
Suddenly the daughter wants to re-connect with them and will arrive at the same time that the parents are hosting an event at their home for friends.
In the midst of socializing, the father is anxiously awaiting her arrival. Roth stretched out the anguish of the Father over at least fifty pages ; I was unable to put down the book during this event.

The second event occurred in The Human Stain. One of the main characters deliberately meets the man believed to have caused the death of two acquaintances. However, he has to pretend that the meeting is a chance occurrence, which is difficult since they meet on a frozen lake while ice fishing. The character has to carry out a credible conversation on the merits
of fishing techniques while neither being an ice Fisher nor being familiar with the lake. A high risk and remote setting that does not offer much, if any, protection.

The American Dream of economic progress is played out throughout the three books. Most of the characters have. advanced relative to their parents. In contrast to this, Roth highlights the treatment accorded to Black Society and to the race riots that occurred at that time in New Jersey. The author also highlights the unsafe and dangerous conditions in which Miners had to work.

As well, the abandonment of some of the ideals of the Republic were drawn out when the Federal Government over reacted to the threat of Communism and curtailed many political rights.

Roth posed an ethical dilemma in the American Pastoral. The parents, distraught about their daughter's actions, were stymied in making contact with her over a lengthy period. Later in this timeline, the parents learn that an acquaintance (who is also the Daughter's Psychologist) was aware of her whereabouts but never shared any information with the parents.

A shortcoming is that the author quickly switches back and forth between characters which, at times, makes the story disjointed.
Also, some of the Jewish terms used were not defined in the Kindle Dictionary.
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Lucíola Nerilo
5.0 out of 5 stars É adequado para o meu nível de inglês?
Reviewed in Brazil on February 7, 2020
Adquiri este livro para aprimorar meu inglês. No entanto, achei a linguagem dele um pouco difícil para quem não tem o inglês como língua nativa. Depois de algumas páginas parece que o cérebro se ajusta e fica mais fácil. O dicionário do Kindle ajuda bastante, mas na próxima vez em que for adquirir livros em língua estrangeira vou pesquisar antes para saber se é adequado ao meu nível de conhecimento daquela língua.
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K.J. Cleetus
5.0 out of 5 stars Philip Roth at his best
Reviewed in India on January 15, 2019
We won't have any more novels from the late Philip Roth But this is one of his best. Read and enjoy!
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Anna Naretto
5.0 out of 5 stars FANTASTISCH
Reviewed in Germany on January 1, 2019
Ein erschütterndes, unglaublich gut geschriebenes Buch, das den Leser absolut Gefangen nimmt. Werde auf jeden Fall den Rest der Trilogie weiter lesen!
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