From the viewpoint of establishment and settlement of the United States, the deep-rooted individualist ideology of the United States has made the country efforts for independence and independence. This ideology is in Walt Whitman 's words: "A man is not a perfect man unless he owns the home and the basis on which it is based" (Jackson 50). However, dependence and socialist threats in the early 20th century brought the country consistency after the Second World War and reached the ultimate height in the Eisenhower era in the 1950s.
The way to the revolution of Richard Yeats: (1) Even if a movie based on this novel brings him at least recognition after death, Yeats never got what he deserves. The road to the revolution is a reminder of the postwar burnout and a monument to the desolate sorrow of the suburbs and how to accomplish our best plan (and usually not). Yates is Updike without decoration. He also wrote sentences. Adthan Waldman 's Nathaniel P: (B - / C +) love event is not my tea, but there are enough people to talk about this book to read it. If you are traveling in Brooklyn social circle and you know the belly that is watching youth, this book is for you. As a journalist and writer, he used the same idiot as he used to know at university, some new friends picked it from anywhere, and I really could not contact. I have never participated in social novels, so maybe this is my fault. You can see what Waldman is trying to achieve.
In the novel, men are dissatisfied with this idea, but can not find an escape path. In the revolutionary way of Richard Yates, unintentional pregnancy gave birth to Frank Wheeler, the main character, a bachelor's degree, Greenwich Village, and his dream of becoming a writer. Soon Wheeler found a paid job at a computer company like the IBM in Connecticut and a suburban house and removed his shallow existence in an ironic "revolutionary way" but it could not get rid of it. . The plan was to flee to Paris, but in the end, Wheeler accepted his company raised salary, and still unhappy, in fear of alternative lifestyle uncertainties. Likewise, in John Updike's "Rabbit, Running", a teen rabbit Angstrom can not find a way to get rid of unwanted pregnancies and associated marriages, just to make a crazy desperate sprint for the horizon Only.