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The Dying Animal
The Dying Animal
The Dying Animal
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The Dying Animal

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

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David Kepesh is white-haired and over sixty, an eminent TV culture critic and star lecturer at a New York college, when he meets Consuela Castillo, a decorous, well-mannered student of twenty-four, the daughter of wealthy Cuban exiles, who promptly puts his life into erotic disorder.
Since the sexual revolution of the 1960s, when he left his wife and child, Kepesh has experimented with living what he calls an "emancipated manhood," beyond the reach of family or a mate. Over the years he has refined that exuberant decade of protest and license into an orderly life in which he is both unimpeded in the world of eros and studiously devoted to his aesthetic pursuits. But the youth and beauty of Consuela, "a masterpiece of volupté" undo him completely, and a maddening sexual possessiveness transports him to the depths of deforming jealousy. The carefree erotic adventure evolves, over eight years, into a story of grim loss.
What is astonishing is how much of America’s post-sixties sexual landscape is encompassed in THE DYING ANIMAL. Once again, with unmatched facility, Philip Roth entangles the fate of his characters with the social forces that shape our daily lives. And there is no character who can tell us more about the way we live with desire now than David Kepesh, whose previous incarnations as a sexual being were chronicled by Roth in THE BREAST and THE PROFESSOR OF DESIRE.
A work of passionate immediacy as well as a striking exploration of attachment and freedom, THE DYING ANIMAL is intellectually bold, forcefully candid, wholly of our time, and utterly without precedent--a story of sexual discovery told about himself by a man of seventy, a story about the power of eros and the fact of death.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperCollins
Release dateMay 18, 2001
ISBN9780547344010
Author

Philip Roth

PHILIP ROTH (1933–2018) won the Pulitzer Prize for American Pastoral in 1997. In 1998 he received the National Medal of Arts at the White House and in 2002 the highest award of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the Gold Medal in Fiction, previously awarded to John Dos Passos, William Faulkner and Saul Bellow, among others. He twice won the National Book Award, the PEN/Faulkner Award, and the National Book Critics Circle Award. In 2005 The Plot Against America received the Society of American Historians’ prize for “the outstanding historical novel on an American theme for 2003–2004” and the W.H. Smith Award for the Best Book of the Year, making Roth the first writer in the forty-six-year history of the prize to win it twice. In 2005 Roth became the third living American writer to have his works published in a comprehensive, definitive edition by the Library of America. In 2011 he received the National Humanities Medal at the White House, and was later named the fourth recipient of the Man Booker International Prize. In 2012 he won Spain’s highest honor, the Prince of Asturias Award, and in 2013 he received France’s highest honor, Commander of the Legion of Honor.

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Rating: 3.5221932950391643 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I don't know about this one. I picked it up from my mother's holiday home, summer-reading bookshelf for a light read. As a 57 year old male, of course I was drawn into this story of a 60+ professor who has affairs with his students - rather than remain loyally married. But it felt a more than a little lurid. And to what point?
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Imagine if a more cynical/urban/East Coast Henry Miller wrote a version of Tuesdays with Morrie
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    There's a lot of power in this story. At first I marvelled at the authors ability to weave the narrative so well. The next thing I knew I was doubled over bawling.

    I suppose the book is at once a character study and a commentary on the evolution of western culture; both intermingle flawlessly. But mostly, it spoke to me of the inevitability of death. The main character ignores the reality and responsibility of his own mortal prison, but all that does is illuminate Consuela's story. It is in that light, her light, that we make out the shape of the animal that is David.

    When was it that I too began to think of age in terms of how much time I had left, rather than how long I'd been alive?

    I'd rate this five stars if it weren't for the nagging sense that the author had it in him to tighten up the narrative, pull out some of the historical musings, and focus the inner monologue. For whatever reason, he tied things up a little too loosely. Still, be careful. Don't ever underestimate Roth.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    What a gorgeous story. It's a true masterpiece from Philip Roth. David Kepesh (age 70) is reflecting on love life, sex and relationship. Starting with an addicted love affair with one of his students he is drifting in his memory to other relationships and is telling the reader what the past and the present has brought to his former lovers. He is also trying to help his son whom he has left in early age and to whom he never has been very close. On the one side Roth is writing like a kind of psychoanalyst and on the other hand there is a lot of wink and esprit.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Right after I finished this book I watched Elegy, which is a movie based on the book. I'd say you could skip the book and go straight to the DVD.

    It's not that I didn't enjoy it. I just don't know that I would have enjoyed it if I didn't know as much about Roth's background as I do. Because you see, it was based directly on a situation in his life.

    That situation is basically that he's an old man but he still loves the young ladies. He is a professor at a major university, sets his sites on a Cuban girl in his class and begins sleeping with her. Eventually he does weird things like lick blood off of her legs.

    The book is a pretty self-indulgent undertaking. It is clearly just him trying to make sense of the affair and an attempt to discern why it affected him so much. I don't think he quite accomplishes that but I did end the book feeling like I'd gotten some useful insight into his own life and how it's affected a few of his other books.

    Overall : I would not recommend this to anyone who is just starting out with Roth. In fact, I wouldn't even recommend it to a Roth fan who hadn't read both The Professor of Desire and The Breast.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Well.. what to say about this book. I read it because I enjoyed "Elegy", the movie which was based on it. While the movie followed the story line of the book, the book was much more introspective. We experience everything through the main charactor's mind, and it mostly deals with how he feels about getting old. It was a well written, short, fast read, but if it had been much longer I probably would not have finished it. I found the ending very unsatisfying - probably because I did not really understand it.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Readers who view Roth as a pervert obsessed with sex and young girls miss the point of this work. We are all sexual beings who, at some point in our lives, are forced to deal with our aging, diminishing bodies. Does this effect how we perceive ourselves sexually? Of course. In, The Dying Animal, Roth deals with this issue from two perspectives - that of the aging man contrasted and connected with that of a beautiful young woman faced with breast cancer and her pending mastectomy. The young woman is forced to confront the effect the chemotherapy and surgery will have on her sense of self as a sexual being. In the background, there is death. That is, the death of a friend dying too young, the death of relatives and how it affect our sense of security. In essence, life. Roth is a brilliant and perceptive writer. It is unfortunate to read one review after another on LT missing the true essence of this wonderful novella.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I have to say I expected more. In the end I only could see an immature old man, who is dying to have more time to enjoy his life, he unable to face reality and has to hide his fears with relationships with young women. Dos he fall in love in the end?
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Why bother writing this stuff, Roth? Same old, same old. Save your energies for significant works (like American Pastoral). Masturbate in private, svp.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    One of the few (actually, I can only think of this one) examples of a novel written to dispute a poem. In this case, "Sailing to Byzantium", by W.B. Yeats. One of Roth's transgressive heroes (David Kepesh, from The Breast and The Professor of Desire), who represents the catastrophe of dedicating old age to "Monuments of unageing intellect".
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    2001. David Kepesh is 62 when he has an affair with a 24-year-old student, Consuela Castillo. He sleeps with her for a year and a half then is depressed about losing her for three years thereafter. Eight years after their affair, she contacts him to tell him she has breast cancer. Her breasts were so enormously important in his erotic life, that he is quite devastated by the news that she will lose one. He is 70 by this time, but he seems likely to become hopelessly entangled with her again, but the book ends. The point seems to be that no man is immune to ridiculous behavior in love. He never even seems really in love with her, but he is obsessed with her. Interesting, but not great, perhaps over-intellectualized. He is not in the moment like Portnoy, but recalling the events and analyzing them trying to gain some understanding about them that eludes his grasp.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    His best so far. Extremely cool and sexual. Plus Zuleika read it and we had long hours of talk afterward.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A revealing look at the Sexual Revolution through the eyes of an aging man. Philip Roth is among by favorite authors. "The Dying Animal" doesn't come close to the achieving the brilliant feats Roth accomplished in some of his other works, namely "The Plot Against America" and "American Pastoral." Still, it presents a graphic snapshot of how one intriguing character struggles with colliding emotions, passion and death. This thin tome (156 pages) is well worth the read.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I guess this is Philip Roth's usual fare, but it is rather too much "literature" for me --- a meditation on life, love, death and all that, without really going anywhere.
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    I disliked this book. Particularly, I disliked the main character so much that I began to resent that I was using my time to read about him.

Book preview

The Dying Animal - Philip Roth

[Image]

Contents


Title Page

Contents

Copyright

Dedication

Epigraph

The Dying Animal

About the Author

Copyright © 2001 by Philip Roth

All rights reserved

For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to [email protected] or to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 3 Park Avenue, 19th Floor, New York, New York 10016.

www.hmhco.com

The Library of Congress has cataloged the print edition as follows:

Roth, Philip.

The dying animal / Philip Roth.

I. Title

p. cm.

ISBN 0-618-13587-1

PS3568.0855 D95 2001

813'.54—dc21 00-054225

eISBN 978-0-547-34401-0

v2.0116

For N. M.

The body contains the life story just as much as the brain.

—EDNA O’BRIEN

I KNEW HER eight years ago. She was in my class. I don’t teach full-time anymore, strictly speaking don’t teach literature at all—for years now just the one class, a big senior seminar in critical writing called Practical Criticism. I attract a lot of female students. For two reasons. Because it’s a subject with an alluring combination of intellectual glamour and journalistic glamour and because they’ve heard me on NPR reviewing books or seen me on Thirteen talking about culture. Over the past fifteen years, being cultural critic on the television program has made me fairly well known locally, and they’re attracted to my class because of that. In the beginning, I didn’t realize that talking on TV once a week for ten minutes could be so impressive as it turns out to be to these students. But they are helplessly drawn to celebrity, however inconsiderable mine may be.

Now, I’m very vulnerable to female beauty, as you know. Everybody’s defenseless against something, and that’s it for me. I see it and it blinds me to everything else. They come to my first class, and I know almost immediately which is the girl for me. There is a Mark Twain story in which he runs from a bull, and the bull looks up to him when he’s hiding in a tree, and the bull thinks, You are my meat, sir. Well, that sir is transformed into young lady when I see them in class. It is now eight years ago—I was already sixty-two, and the girl, who is called Consuela Castillo, was twenty-four. She is not like the rest of the class. She doesn’t look like a student, at least not like an ordinary student. She’s not a demi-adolescent, she’s not a slouching, unkempt, like-ridden girl. She’s well spoken, sober, her posture is perfect—she appears to know something about adult life along with how to sit, stand, and walk. As soon as you enter the class, you see that this girl either knows more or wants to. The way she dresses. It isn’t exactly what’s called chic, she’s certainly not flamboyant, but, to begin with, she’s never in jeans, pressed or unpressed. She dresses carefully, with quiet taste, in skirts, dresses, and tailored pants. Not to desensualize herself but more, it would seem, to professionalize herself, she dresses like an attractive secretary in a prestigious legal firm. Like the secretary to the bank chairman. She has a cream-colored silk blouse under a tailored blue blazer with gold buttons, a brown pocketbook with the patina of expensive leather, and little ankle boots to match, and she wears a slightly stretchy gray knitted skirt that reveals her body lines as subtly as such a skirt possibly could. Her hair is done in a natural but cared-for manner. She has a pale complexion, the mouth is bowlike though the lips are full, and she has a rounded forehead, a polished forehead of a smooth Brancusi elegance. She is Cuban. Her family are prosperous Cubans living in Jersey, across the river in Bergen County. She has black, black hair, glossy but ever so slightly coarse. And she’s big. She’s a big woman. The silk blouse is unbuttoned to the third button, and so you see she has powerful, beautiful breasts. You see the cleavage immediately. And you see she knows it. You see, despite the decorum, the meticulousness, the cautiously soigné style—or because of them—that she’s aware of herself. She comes to the first class with the jacket buttoned over her blouse, yet some five minutes into the session, she has taken it off. When I glance her way again, I see that she’s put it back on. So you understand that she’s aware of her power but that she isn’t sure yet how to use it, what to do with it, how much she even wants it. That body is still new to her, she’s still trying it out, thinking it through, a bit like a kid walking the streets with a loaded gun and deciding whether he’s packing it to protect himself or to begin a life of crime.

And she’s aware of something else, and this I couldn’t know from the one class meeting: she finds culture important in a reverential, old-fashioned way. Not that it’s something she wishes to live by. She doesn’t and she couldn’t—too traditionally well brought up for that—but it’s important and wonderful as nothing else she knows is. She’s the one who finds the Impressionists ravishing but must look long and hard—and always with a sense of nagging confoundment—at a Cubist Picasso, trying with all her might to get the idea. She stands there waiting for the surprising new sensation, the new thought, the new emotion, and when it won’t come, ever, she chides herself for being inadequate and lacking . . . what? She chides herself for not even knowing what it is she lacks. Art that smacks of modernity leaves her not merely puzzled but disappointed in herself. She would love for Picasso to matter more, perhaps to transform her, but there’s a scrim drawn across the proscenium of genius that obscures her vision and keeps her worshiping at a bit of a distance. She gives to art, to all of art, far more than she gets back, a sort of earnestness that isn’t without its poignant appeal. A good heart, a lovely face, a gaze at once inviting and removed, gorgeous breasts, and so newly hatched as a woman that to find fragments of broken shell adhering to that ovoid forehead wouldn’t have been a surprise. I saw right away that this was going to be my girl.

Now, I have one set rule of some fifteen years’ standing that I never break. I don’t any longer get in touch with them on a private basis until they’ve completed their final exam and received their grade and I am no longer officially in loco parentis. In spite of temptation—or even a clear-cut signal to begin the flirtation and make the approach—I haven’t broken this rule since, back in the mid-eighties, the phone number of the sexual harassment hotline was first posted outside my office door. I don’t get in touch with them any earlier so as not to run afoul of those in the university who, if they could, would seriously impede my enjoyment of life.

I teach each year for fourteen weeks, and during that time I don’t have affairs with them. I play a trick instead. It’s an honest trick, it’s an open and above-board trick, but it is a trick nonetheless. After the final examination and once the grades are in, I throw a party in my apartment for the students. It is always a success and it is always the same. I invite them for a drink at about six o’clock. I say that from six to eight we are going to have a drink, and they always stay till two in the morning. The bravest ones, after ten o’clock, develop into lively characters and tell me what they really are interested in. In the Practical Criticism seminar there are about twenty students, sometimes as many as twenty-five, so there will be fifteen, sixteen girls and five or six boys, of whom two or three are straight. Half of this group has left the party by ten. Generally, one straight boy, maybe one gay boy, and some nine girls will stay. They’re invariably the most cultivated, intelligent, and spirited of the lot. They talk about what they’re reading, what they’re listening to, what art shows they’ve seen—enthusiasms that they don’t normally go on about with their elders or necessarily with their friends. They find one another in my class. And they find me. During the party they suddenly see I am a human being. I’m not their teacher, I’m not my reputation, I’m not their parent. I have a pleasant, orderly duplex apartment, they see my large library, aisles of double-faced bookshelves that house a lifetime’s reading and take up almost the entire downstairs floor, they see my piano, they see my devotion to what I do, and they stay.

My funniest student one year was like the goat in the fairy tale that goes into the clock to hide. I threw the last of them out at two in the morning, and while saying good night, I missed one girl. I said, Where is our class clown, Prospero’s daughter? Oh, I think Miranda left, somebody said. I went back into the apartment to start cleaning the place up and I heard a door being closed upstairs. A bathroom door. And Miranda came down the stairs, laughing, radiant with a kind of goofy abandon—I’d never, till that moment, realized that she was so pretty—and she said, Wasn’t that clever of me? I’ve been hiding in your upstairs bathroom, and now I’m going to sleep with you.

A little thing, maybe five foot one, and she pulled off her sweater and showed me her tits, revealing the adolescent torso of an incipiently transgressive Balthus virgin, and of course we slept together. All evening long, much like a young girl escaped from the perilous melodrama of a Balthus painting into the fun of the class party, Miranda had been on all fours on the floor with her rump raised or lying helplessly prostrate on my sofa or lounging gleefully across the arms of an easy chair seemingly oblivious of the fact that with her skirt riding up her thighs and her legs undecorously parted she had the Balthusian air of being half undressed while fully clothed. Everything’s hidden and nothing’s concealed. Many of these girls have been having sex since they were fourteen, and by their twenties there are one or two curious to do it with a man of my years, if just the once, and eager the next day to tell all their friends, who crinkle up their faces and ask, But what about his skin? Didn’t he smell funny? What about his long white hair? What about his wattle? What about his little pot belly? Didn’t you feel sick?

Miranda told me afterward, You must have slept with hundreds of women. I wanted to see what it would be like. And? And then she said things I didn’t entirely believe, but it didn’t matter. She had been audacious—she had seen she could do it, game and terrified though

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