Memories of the Ford Administration explained

Memories of the Ford Administration
Author:John Updike
Cover Artist:Chip Kidd
Country:United States
Language:English
Genre:Philosophical, War
Publisher:Alfred A. Knopf
Release Date:1992
Media Type:Print (hardcover) and (audio-CD)
Pages:369 pp
Isbn:0-679-41681-1
Dewey:813/.54 20
Congress:PS3571.P4 M45 1992b
Oclc:26055447

Memories of the Ford Administration is a 1992 novel by John Updike published by Knopf. The novel concerns a college professor's attempt to write a reminiscence of the Presidential administration of Gerald Ford while being distracted by events in his personal and professional life.

Synopsis

Alf Clayton, a struggling history professor at Wayward Junior College in New Hampshire, receives a request from the Northern New England Association of American Historians (NNEAAH) to provide his memories and impressions of the Presidential administration of Gerald Ford. Clayton has spent several years unsuccessfully attempting to write a new biography of President James Buchanan and the two projects intertwine as Clayton's mind shifts between them. Simultaneously, Clayton's guilt over his extramarital affair with another professor at the college both influences and is influenced by the Buchanan book.[1] [2]

Major themes

The New York Times Book Review described the novel as "quintessential Updike, an exploration of a modern American terrain of desire, guilt and moral ambiguity that he has made distinctly his own." Updike uses Clayton and his rival professor Brent Mueller, an ardent deconstructionist, to comment on deconstruction and sexual politics. While Clayton hates Mueller for his adherence to deconstruction, he nonetheless finds himself utilizing the theory to justify his interest in a comparatively obscure president and assuage his guilt over the affair with Mueller's wife Geraldine.

Notes and References

  1. Pinsker . Beth . Fact, Fiction and Ford In New Updike Novel News The Harvard Crimson . www.thecrimson.com . November 5, 1992 .
  2. Web site: NYTimes . archive.nytimes.com . 25 January 2022.