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Endpoint and Other Poems
Endpoint and Other Poems
Dec 19, 2025 10:27 PM

Author:John Updike

Endpoint and Other Poems

John Updike was always as much a poet as a storyteller and the poems in this, his final collection, celebrate the everyday, even as they address his own imminent mortality. It is in the connected series of poems, Endpoint, written on his last few birthdays and culminating with the illness that killed him, that Updike's work is at its most touching and poignant.

Reviews

As it gathered pace... I found my heart beating faster. I cannot remember a more compulsive book... I am bowled over by the art of the novelist

—— Daily Telegraph

Kennedy knows how to keep the pages turning...A pacy, absorbing and intelligent story

—— Elizabeth Buchan, The Times

Excellent ... The pace is thriller-like, so cancel all engagements for the duration

—— Good Housekeeping

Writing in the first person as a woman, [Kennedy] pulls off a bold imaginative transformation that I find enthralling and persuasive

—— Jonathan Raban

His impressive achievement is... his narrator Sally, whose turbulent emotions he conveys with an unusual depth of understanding

—— Times Literary Supplement

A gripping novel of love, destiny and lives falling apart

—— Mail on Sunday

An exceptionally powerful study of motherhood as nightmare, and a first-rate courtroom thriller, displaying all Kennedy's flair for plotting

—— Sunday Times

A compelling emotional rollercoaster of a novel

—— Woman & Home

It is an exceptionally powerful study of motherhood as nightmare, and a first-rate court-room thriller

—— The Times

This imaginative, atmospheric period novel has style and a host of characters

—— Eileen Battersby , Irish Times

It takes courage to write a novel about two of Britain's best-know poets - John Clare and Alfred Lord Tennyson - and their encounter in an Epping Forest asylum. It takes skill to turn that into an engrossing, beautiful novel. Foulds has shown both

—— Angel Gurria-Quintana , Financial Times

Rich in its understanding and representation of the mad, the sane, and that large overlapping category in between

—— Guardian, Julian Barnes

Every character, every narrative strand is stunningly written, making it an engrossing and unusual historical novel

—— Sunday Telegraph

The world he evokes is conjured up with remarkable intensity and economy of means

—— Nick Rennison , The Sunday Times

The novel is most notable for its savage descriptions of rural life

—— Alfred Hickling , Guardian

Foulds does a marvellous job of evoking the atmosphere of the forest. His prose has none of the awkwardness one often encounters when real-life characters are brought into play

—— Sunday Herald

With its unflinching look at treatments of madness, and its authentic period feel, this is an appropriately disturbing, while also beautifully written, story of human endeavour - and human failure.

—— The Independent on Sunday

Chosen in The New Yorker Books of the year 2010: 'An intricate homage to two nineteenth-century poets'.

—— New Yorker

Blake Morrison's examination of the dark heart of male rivalry makes foe a gripping read

—— Aminatta Forna , Sunday Telegraph, Christmas round up

Pacy and gripping...wonderfully atmospheric

—— Good Book Guide

Morrison's compelling study of male competitiveness offers a discomforting account of the amoral excuses and self-deception of the compulsive gambler: "I don't have a problem. I could stop tomorrow"; "gambling is the basis of our whole economy". You reckon you could put it down at any point - though you'd be kidding yourself

—— Alfred Hickling , Guardian

The Bank Holiday weekend from hell is the subject of Blake Morrison's entertaining new novel - a dark little tale about middle-class rivalry and midsummer meltdown. With an ear attuned to metropolitan pretension - modern parenting skills are sent up with gusto - Morrison succeeds in weaving a murderous melodrama that is grounded in the most recognizable of human impulses and desires

—— Emma Hagestadt , Independent

A tense chamber piece about a twisted friendship...the author's skilful choreography of unsympathetic characters and a menacing tone make for a sharply intelligent novel that is both unnerving and enjoyable

—— Financial Times

The Last Weekend isn't really a thriller though its well-paced, tight and gripping narrative has you reaching for the same adjectives that you would use to describe one

—— Paul Dunn , The Times

For those holidaying with old friends…the book tells the chilling story ofa rivalrousfriendship…leaving Alex Clark to conclude that Morrison “keeps the reader constantly intrigued

—— Guardian
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