Philip Roth: Difference between revisions
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[[File:Philip Roth - 1973.jpg|thumb|300px|Philip Roth in 1973.]] |
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'''Philip Roth''' is the Pulitzer-winning author of such acclaimed novels as ''[[Portnoy's Complaint]]'', ''[[The Human Stain]]'', ''[[American Pastoral]]'', ''[[The Plot Against America]]'' and the novella ''[[Goodbye Columbus|Goodbye, Columbus]]''. |
'''Philip Roth''' is the Pulitzer-winning author of such acclaimed novels as ''[[Portnoy's Complaint]]'', ''[[The Human Stain]]'', ''[[American Pastoral]]'', ''[[The Plot Against America]]'' and the novella ''[[Goodbye Columbus|Goodbye, Columbus]]''. |
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Revision as of 17:38, 8 March 2019
This Creator page is a stub. You can help All The Tropes by expanding it. If you have checked or updated this page and found the content to be suitable, please remove this notice. |
Philip Roth is the Pulitzer-winning author of such acclaimed novels as Portnoy's Complaint, The Human Stain, American Pastoral, The Plot Against America and the novella Goodbye, Columbus.
His works largely revolve around several recurring themes - family, sex, America, the Jewish experience, and above all Philip Roth. Everything he writes invariably features some kind of Author Avatar, be it a standalone character (most famously Alexander Portnoy), his recurring character Nathan Zuckerman, or even Roth himself (in which case the degree of autobiographical honesty ranges from "lots" to "almost none" to "not telling"). He always portrays "himself" as a cynical, neurotic intellectual, tinged with misogyny and self-loathing; generally the older the character is, the more pronounced his flaws.
Roth is known for his distinctive writing style, which is at once analytical, impassioned, confessional, foul-mouthed and extremely verbose.