Not anything like a tough-guy novelist who works the street the way Updike works the suburbs.
Elmore Leonard’s Rocky Road to Fame and Fortune|Mike Lupica|September 13, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Then I think of the great writers of suburban misery (and drinking, and adultery), Updike and Cheever.
An Author at Home in Lonely Landscapes|Letitia Trent|July 11, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Pope, Wharton, Nabokov, and Updike, to name only a handful, fail to register at all.
John Sutherland‘s Enjoyable Little History of Literature|Malcolm Forbes|November 29, 2013|DAILY BEAST
He picks his favorite books of criticism, from Updike to Edwidge Danticat.
How to Read a Novel: The 5 Best Books of Criticism, Picked by John Freeman|John Freeman|October 8, 2013|DAILY BEAST
Not Bellow, not Updike, certainly no female writer I can think of.
Writers Pick Their Favorite Philip Roth Novel|The Daily Beast|December 18, 2012|DAILY BEAST
Updike tried his invariable first maneuver—touching her nervous wrist.
Babbitt|Sinclair Lewis
I feel like what Updike calls a "myrmidon of unhesitating amplitude."
Of All Things|Robert C. Benchley
British Dictionary definitions for Updike
Updike
/ (ˈʌpˌdaɪk) /
noun
John (Hoyer). 1932–2009, US writer. His novels include Rabbit, Run (1960), Couples (1968), The Coup (1979), Brazil (1993), Seek My Face (2003), and Rabbit is Rich (1982) and Rabbit at Rest (1990), both of which won Pulitzer prizes