We experience Updike himself with even more candor than he displayed in his first-person essays ... The letters illuminate the consistency of Updike’s fiction aesthetic ... We find acrimony aplenty during the move from one marriage to the next, yet Updike’s tenderness, a natural instinct for conciliation, always re-emerges ... As these letters make plain, this ability to marvel and thank was anything but a hindrance to greatness. As much as anything else, it was Updike’s willingness to take America to his bosom...that guarantees his permanent place in this country’s literature.