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Not What You Meant?  There are 11 definitions for Everyman.

Everyman (novel)

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Everyman (ISBN 0-618-73516-X) is a novella by Philip Roth, published by Houghton Mifflin in April 2006. The audiobook version (ISBN 1-4193-8723-5) is narrated by George Guidall and published by Recorded Books in 2006. It was subsequently granted the PEN/Faulkner award in 2007. [1] It is Roth's third novel that has been awarded the prize.

Contents

Plot summary

The book begins at the funeral of its protagonist. The remainder of the book, which ends with his death, looks mournfully back on episodes from his life, including his childhood in Elizabeth, New Jersey, where he and his older brother, Howie, worked in his father's shop, Everyman's Jewelry Store. He has been married three times, with two sons from his first marriage who resent him for leaving their mother, and one daughter from his second marriage who treats him with kindness and compassion, though he divorced her mother after beginning an affair with a 24-year-old Danish model, who subsequently became his third wife. Having divorced her as well, he has moved in his old age to a retirement community at the New Jersey shore, where he lives alone and attempts to paint, having passed up a career as an artist early in his life to work in advertising in order to support himself and his family. The book traces the protagonist's feelings as he gets increasingly old and sick, and his reflections of his own past, which has included his share of misdeeds and mistakes, as he ponders his impending death. The unnamed everyman, while an ordinary man and not a famous novelist, has much in common with Philip Roth; he is born, like Roth, in 1933; he grows up in Elizabeth, six miles away from Roth's native Newark; and he recounts a series of medical problems and a history of frequent hospitalization similar to that of the author.

Morality play

Everyman is also the title of a fifteenth-century English morality play whose eponymous protagonist is "called" by death and must account for his life on earth before God. About the play, Roth said the following in a late 2005 interview:

The classic is called Everyman, it's from 1485, by an anonymous author. It was right in between the death of Chaucer and the birth of Shakespeare. The moral was always "Work hard and get into heaven", "Be a good Christian or go to hell". Everyman is the main character and he gets a visit from Death. He thinks it's some sort of messenger, but Death says, "I am Death" and Everyman's answer is the first great line in English drama: "Oh, Death, thou comest when I had thee least in mind." When I thought of you least.[1]

External links

Footnotes

  1. ^ Guardian (UK) - Interview with Philip Roth about Everyman
Works by Philip Roth
Fiction
Goodbye, ColumbusLetting GoWhen She Was GoodPortnoy's ComplaintOur GangThe Great American NovelMy Life As a ManSabbath's TheaterEveryman
Kepesh Novels The BreastThe Professor of DesireThe Dying Animal
Zuckerman Novels The Ghost WriterZuckerman UnboundThe Anatomy LessonThe Prague OrgyThe CounterlifeAmerican PastoralI Married a CommunistThe Human StainExit Ghost
Roth Novels DeceptionOperation ShylockThe Plot Against America
Non-fiction
Memoirs PatrimonyThe Facts
On writing Shop TalkReading Myself and Others
Collections
Zuckerman BoundA Philip Roth Reader
Library of America Novels and Stories 1959-1962Novels 1967-1972Novels 1973-1977Novels 1979-1985

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Copyrights
Everyman (novel) from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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