The World of Apples (short story) explained

The World of Apples
Author:John Cheever
Country:United States
Language:English
Published In:Esquire
Pub Date:December 1966

"The World of Apples" is a work of short fiction by John Cheever, first appearing in Esquire, December 1966.The story was collected in the volume The World of Apples (1973), published by Alfred A. Knopf.[1]

Plot

Asa Boscomb is an 82-year-old American expatriate and widower living in Italy; he has not revisited the rural Vermont of his youth for over 40 years. He lives in relative anonymity at his villa south of Rome. As an internationally acclaimed poet, almost every literary award has been bestowed upon him - except the Nobel Prize. Bascomb considers this a glaring omission. He is increasingly concerned that his memory is beginning to deteriorate, on which he depends to compose his short lyrical poems based largely on detailed reminiscences.

Bascomb's complacent internal narrative is disturbed when he accidentally encounters a couple making love in a secluded forest. The incident induces compulsive pornographic thoughts, which Bascomb commits to writing. He is appalled at his own vulgar obscenities. The scatological themes contrast sharply with the virtuous and innocent topics that characterize his most popular volume of poetry, The World of Apples. When Bascomb finds himself writing the word "F- - k" repeatedly, he takes his housekeeper's advice to make a pilgrimage to a local shrine where visitors might have their thoughts purified. There, accompanied by a priest, he makes an offering to the sacred relics. Bascomb offers a prayer to those authors who most influenced his poetry. That night he slumbers, untroubled by scatological images.

The following day, Bascomb discovers a natural waterfall near the rustic church. Inspired by the beauty of the woodland, he recalls an event from his childhood which appears to unfold in front of him. An elderly, white-haired man emerges from the forest, unashamedly strips off his clothing, and steps eagerly under the falls, crying out joyfully in the frigid waters. The old man quickly dries himself and disappears into the woods. Bascomb realizes that the apparition is a memory of his own father. Emulating the vision, Bascomb disrobes and steps under the torrential flow. The waters serve to purify his thoughts and promises to restore his creative energy during the final phase of his life. His failure to become a Nobel Prize recipient no longer troubles him.[2] [3] [4] [5] [6]

Critical assessment

Literary critic Lynne Waldeland declares that "The World of Apples" may be "the best story in the volume- carefully imagined, effectively paced, beautifully expressed. It is also tempting to see it as a quiet manifesto on Cheever's part."[7] With respect to this "manifesto", Waldeland observes that the protagonist, Asa Bascomb, liberates himself from his compulsive sexual fantasies by invoking the pantheon of deceased literary figures who have influenced him as a writer in his youth.[8]

Literary critic Samuel Coale notes that Cheever's "linear precision of style" comports with Asa Bascomb's struggle to achieve spiritual enlightenment:

Coale concludes: "The deceptive simplicity of the story reveals the triumph of Cheever's fictional art and his lyric vision, for both are finally inseparable."[9]

Literary critic Patrick Meanor reports that Cheever "identified himself with those fellow writes whose lives ended prematurely because of their suicidal alcoholic excesses or their actual suicides." In 1966, Cheever listed some of these literary mentors in his journals.[10] The elderly protagonist in "The World of Apples", Asa Bascomb, offers the same paean to his older contemporaries:

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Bailey, 2008 p. 1025-1027
  2. Bailey, 2009 pp. 738-750
  3. Meanor, 1995 p. 146-149: Plot summary
  4. Waldeland, 1979 p. 122-125: Plot summary
  5. Coale, 1977 p. 58-60: Plot summary
  6. O'Hara, 1989 pp. 72-75
  7. Waldeland, 1979 p. 123-124
  8. Waldeland, 1979 p. 123
  9. Coale, 1977 p. 60
  10. Meanor, 1995 p. 185: See The Journals of John Cheever (1991), Alfred A. Knopf publishers.